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(HI VALDOSTA TIMES, TALDOBTA, OA, BA*UK >AT, JUNE 10, 1011.
VALDOSTA SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES
C. C. BBANTLEV, Editor
E. L. TURNER, lluttinet* M*n*«er
BUR8C1U1T1 ON PRICK 91 A YEAH
Entered at the PoatofTIce at Valdosta
Ua. an ttecond Clau Mall Ma't«r.
Madero seems to have as many
plots formed against him as Tom
Watson baa, and ho Is probably In
no more danger.
Cardinal Gibbons manages to keep
his name to the front aa well as the
nejrt one. His press agent Is on
the Job alj right.
Richmond Pearson Hobson Is ma
king temperance lectures In which
he shows how many battleships our
drink bill would buy annually.
Col. Bryan might be persuaded to
bow to the mandates of hia party had
he not long since determined to bow
to nothing but “himself and Gotti"
The Grand Lodge of Elks expect
to have a parade at Atlantic City
that will make King George's coro-
nation parade look like the salvation
army.
It Is a fact not generally known
that thoro are more Confederate vct-
tcrans In tho present Congress than
there are survivors of the Nothern
armies.
Congressman Benjamin Q. Hum-
phrq^g of Mississippi Is the son of
Brig. Gen. Benjamin G. Humphreys,
a dlstingushed soldier of tho Con
federacy.
Congressman John A. Martin of
the Second Colorado district Is men
tioned for the Democratic nomina
tion for governor of his state In the
next eloctlon.
The coming legislature will have
nn opportunity to buy those termi
nals In Chattanooga, which the last
legislature wanted Governor Brown
to purchase.
Last month Is said to have been
tho hottest May this country has had
In forty years, but Juno started
out with the evident intention of
doing just as welL
For a man who wante the farmer's
vote at almost, any moment; Colonel
Tom Hudson la awfully slow In tell
ing how these hot days an cool
nights nro hurting the cotton crop.
Since Congressman Roddenherry
pawed an insolent Washington no-
pto, hla friends have dubbed, him
the “white man's hope." And.
though ever so small, Is woi
couragtag* .
Mr. Bryan has aeen enough In thg
Hint few Wr to convince him thei
the day of 1|la‘'dictating whet the
PemocroitV port* eholl do In. now
•'hurled vtfWreo^rday’o oeven thou
sand yean.”
Tho flovornor of South Carolina
1. determined to have Col, Polder
curried to that state. But thafiOT-
ernor Is not going to nertipt Feld'
er'.r challenge to "show down” be
fore a Jury. * i"
Superstition. Mexicans boltevo the
earthquake wys sent of God
avenge Mexico’s treatment of Dla*.
They probably have not atoppod to
wonder why It did not come in time
to save him.
Louisiana Is sending out a train
to tench the people of thnt atnte how
to care for themaelreo. And the
mote they learn nboutpreventlng dis
eases the more diseases the doctors
will hunt for them to prevent.
“FREE RAW MATERIALS.
The Times Is very glad to see so
distinguished a tariff reformer as
Col Henry Watterson, of the Louis
ville Courier-Journal standing
squarely with It on the question of
raw 'material. When Mr. Bryan
M'tted-ln and volunteered his dicta
torship to the Democrats In congress,
threatening them If they did not
adopt a free-wool schedule, The
Times stated that such an act would
merelymean free raw material, which,
In effect, would put tho Democratic
party In the position of adding to the
profit* of the manufacturers at the
expense of the producers. Such an
pc' would lead to dlaaaters next year
that the party would hardly get over
In the lifetime of any man now old
enough to serve In congress. lOn
tht* subject Col. Watterson—who Is
always Interesting and able—says:
'•We aro beginning to hear talk
about ‘the doctrine of free raw ma-
tecln'a.’ It le as the chatter of chil
dren. There can no more be ft 'doc
trine' on such a snhject than a 'doc
trine' touching 'the free coinage of
pltver at the ratio of 16 to 1.' Hav
ing gone to destruction upon the
reeks raised up by the latter, shall
the shallow* of the other he allowed
to Impede our Onward course, to
pernlex and undo us?
"Free raw materials, like free sil
ver. Is the merest Incident of legls-
lotlon. In undertaking to force Mr.
T'nderwood. Mr. Bryan Is a* one who
demands that. Instead of ndmtn's-
terlng the ealomet In broken doses,
the doctor ahnll wltly-ntlly pour n
undrod grainy down the patient’s
threat. Mr. Bryan may he right, and
Mr, Underwood may he wrong In
diagnosing the ease. But the to-
srnnsIMtlty Is with Mr. Underwood,
not with Brynn.
Free raw materials’ was a de
vice trumped up In the East to catch
the manufacturers. Taken In eon-
nect'on with the corresponding re
duction In the nrlee of the finished
product It wn* s’l right. But tn ar
ranging the details of n tariff act
still taxing the neon’e. It gave ft priv
ileged class cvervthtng and left the
class most heavily pressed by the
taxation nothing.
The Courier-Journal will hard’y
he accused end can not he suspected
of a dtsnosltlnn to lower Its flag tn
matter of the tariff. Tt Is th*
'nst survivor of tho old guard of rev
enue reformer*. Heartbroken H saw
Us partyJstally shipwrecked -by meet
Incompetent navigation. literally
wrecked In port. Tt hnd abandoned
hone. Yet.It hna lived to nee the
nnestton come again. Taking eoun-
re’ of the oast—even of some of Its
ear mistakes which Mr. Bryan now
would cony—It will seek tn the com
ing bnttle for tho right to achieve
rather than to theorize nnd declaim,
‘he Bemorrnle nnrty has for the
In sixteen yenrn entoyed
inell of snnshlne. We have a
living ebenee to win. But we are
pqt yet masters of the situation.
,Th*{ivt;,may become so we must
holcj jgtii together nn.l keen a little
to.the fell.. It were Indeed a fate—
pe.destlh^irthit, *t the moment when
fftdpfel(ren nroteet'ontsts are «ntlt-
IlnVltnlre among themselves. Domo-
orst« l proteodlng only to he bent uaon
driving graft from the tariff and re-
dofljA.lt, as we are able, to a reve
nue jfcesls, should engace In chatter
nhofl't the Incidents and make con
troversy over the conveyance, set ns
we -Ml c’nfm to he, tn a common di
rection nnd purpose.
"So. come nwnv. Mr. Urvnn! Avast
there and leave *he hors s chance
Id start tbs old Parry-all of Demor-
raey In their .own wav. not 'n yonr
wav. Yon have scarcely hnd such
rood fortune ns remmends von ns
the host and onlv dr’vor. The Cou
rier-Journal Is yonr friend, not yonr
enemy. Come off. (before your ene
mies have Ibe right to say that with
you It Is rule, or ruin.."
The Times Union and Citizen
says that Ananias was only a tax-
dodger and no bigger liar than ev
ery hamlet boasts of these days,
lint Ananias la the only one who got
wDnt was coming to him right away.
Tho report cornea from Washing
ton that Roosevelt will aupport Taft
In the next light. After what hap
pened last fall, Roosevelt has prob
ably decided that he and Taft had
bettor stick together—since misery
loves company.
A dispatch say* that an aviator at
l.os Angeles struck a cow "while
sailing his ht-plnne," which goes to
show that Valdosta and Wayerass
are not the only towna where *he bi
planes refused to "get off the
ground."
Billy Burwell and John Holder ore
hoth candidates for speaher, and
each seema to believe that honors
are coming hts way. Holder claims
a majority of the legislators are al
ready pledged to him, but Burwell
says that neither has recalved that
muttr pledges.
ions are of grass; and when the fitful
fever Is ended and toe roollsh wran
gle of the market and the farm la
closed, grass beats over the scar,
which our descent Into the bosom of
the earth has made, and the carpet
of the Infant becomes the blanket pf
the dead.
As he reflected upon the (brevity
cf human life grass has been the fa
vorite symbol of the moralist, the
chosen theme of the philosopher.
"All flesh Is grass,” said the pro
phet; "My days are as the grass,"
sighed the troubled patriarch; and
the pensive Nehucadnezzar, In his
penitential mood, exci
these, and as the sacred
Informs, did eat grass like i
Crass Is the forgiveness
tore—her constant benediction.
Fields trampled with battle, satnra-j
ted with blood, torn with the ruts of
cannon, grow green again with the
grass, and carnage Is forgotten,
Streets abandoned by traffic become
grass-grown like rural lanes, and are
obliterated. Forests decay, harvest*
perish, flowers vanish, but grass Is
Immortal. Beleaguered by the sul
len hosts of winter It withdraws Into
tho Impregnable fortress of Its sub-
erranean vitality, nnd emerges unoii
the first solicitations of spring.
Sown by the wind, by wandering
birds, propagated by the subtle hor
ticulture of the elements which are
Us ministers nnd servants. It softens
the nude outlines of the world,
tenacious fibers hold the earth In Its
plr.ee and prevent Ita soluble com
ponents from washing Into the wast
ing sea. Tt Invades the solitude of
deserts, climbs the tnaecesn'hle a'nna.
and forbidden pjnacles of mountains,
modifies climates and determines the
history, caaracter and destiny of na
tions. Uncfbtrnslve and patient. It
PROSE rOKM ON GRASS.
The composition below will show
what can bo done by a gifted man
who has trained hli power of thought
and expression:
Next In Importance to the divine
profusion of water, light and air,
those three great physical acts which
render existence possible may be
reckoned the- universal beneficence
of grass. Exaggeration by tropical
heats and vapore to the gigantic
cane congested with Its saccharine
secretion or dw*rted by polar re
gions to the 1)brans hair of northern
solitudes, embracing between these
extremes the mats* with Its resolute
pennons, the rice plant of southern
awampa, the wheat, rye. barley,
eats and other cereals, no teas than
the humble Terdne of hillside, n«a-
tnre end pratri* tn the temperate
rone. Ortas I*, the'most widely dis
tributed of all vegetable beings, and
Is at once the' type or oniMlfe and
the emblem of ouy. mortify,. Lying
In the eunebjnf'junpnir th* jmttor-
cups and -tha .dafpleltfins of May,
scarcely higher Tn Intelligence than
the minute tenants of that mimic
wilderness, onr earliest reeollect-
has Immortal vigor and aggression.. W’hc feve trading to do. A road
that will allow the man from the
country to carry the largest possible
load to town and bring back home
the largest amount of merchandise,
guano or other supplies is the road
that ought to be -built Art, provided
It la a road through a thickly set
tled section which would furnish a
large amount of travel.
' -It * It- Bass will prick hla finger
mth b, pin-point he will see tt
(feed , That Is berause there are
jdc.xll ijlnst that rut all hrough the
Banished from the thoroughfare and
the Held fit bides Its time to return
nnd when vigilance lg relaxed, or
the dynasty has perished, It silently
resumes the throne from which It
hns been expelled, but which It never
abdicates. It hears no blazonry of
bloom to charm the senses with fra
grance or splendor, but Its homely
hue la more enchanting than the lily
or the rose. Tt yields no fruit In
earth or sir, and yet should Its bare
voct fall for a single year, famine
would depopulate the world.—John
J. Kigali*
THE CA^tLOE, PnnjAasFj.,
The . nder la that tho IT
wa* so moderate In the rebuke
administered to Col. Joseph Gai
commanding the cavalry post at
Fort Myer, Va., who objected to
efforts of Private Frank Bloom to
secure promotion because of his Jew
ish parentage. Bloom’s father being
a tailor at the post. This young
man Bloom was ambitious to be
come an officer In the army, and bad
endeavored to get an appointment
to West Point during the adminis
tration of President Roosevelt
There was no vacancy at the time
nnd Col. Roosevelt advised him to
enlist aa a private and work hla way
to a commission. He acted on the
advice and proved himself a model
soldier, but the commander at Fort
Myer would keep him down simply
because of race. It isn’t nt all surpris
ing that the President was Indignant
when tho facts came to hts atten
tion. Not only was It proposed by
n colonel of tho army to keep In
the ranks of a worthy young man
recking advancement in accordance
with the army regulation, but also
to set aside the policy of a former
commander-ln-chlef of the army and
also the policy of the present com
mander-in-chief.
It didn’t take tho President long
to decide upon the course to be pur
sued In the case, and, apparently,
It he had acted In accordance with
hts real feelings In the matter he
would have made his rebuke much
more severe than he did. Not only
have there been many Jews among
the officers of our army, hut some
of the great soldiers of the world
hare been Jews. Whatever the
personal feeling* of the Fort Myer
colonel may be In the matter he had
no right to inject them In an offi
cial report. He made a mistake
that he will hardly make again. Not
withstanding the talk of the treat-
leg for settling international diffi
culties by arbitration the time may
come when eret1 men like the Fort
Meyer colonel will welcome Jews In
the army. For good citizenship
nnd patriotism the Jews have a rec
ord that compares favorably with
that of any other clasa of citizens.
—Savannah Morning News.
I? there la aa much swindling done
in Georgia which weights and meas
ures aa there Is In New York the
next legislature ought to make
an appropriation to provide weight
and measure testers nnd the proper
officials ought to be put on to the
job of testing.
AIJj WANT GOOD ROADS.
Mr. J. H. Bass,of the Naylor dla
tr.ct “writes The Times a card, which
»• publish elsewhere In this Issue.
In which be puts himself on record
sa being in favor of good roads, but
he tldnks that good roads ought to
be built nil over the county, or, nt
least, one good road In each district.
Wi agree with part of what Mr.
Bam says, bnt we cannot follow him
all of the way unless we knew more
about conditions than we now know.
Mr. Bass will probably agree with
good roads cannot be built
.the county at the same time,
been to mill with the corn
gin house with cotton ot
to know that the miller
c everybody at the same
imebody must be first and
must he last. The dl-
of doing things is "line
upon like, precept upon precept, here
a little and there a little." After
awhile the whole la finished.
Ip building roads and in serving
the, public Jn other waya the rule ts
to try zmd do the most good for the
greateatf number of people. In bulld-
ls, it Is the rule to build toe
first The intersecting
be built afterwards. If
feagolng to build a rall-
have no doubt that he
would build Ms mainline before he
rtprted on hla branches. If he were
going to drain hla field he would dig
hlr main ditch before digging the
lateral or feeding ditches.
It Is Important to build good roads
first in the direction that they are
most used. The roads leading to
town are used, no so much by the
town ore'used, not so much by the
country who have produce to cell or,
PROPER REWARD
Becomes a Problem When Lives Are
Saved by the Hundred.
Saving Human IJTe Is Now Accom
plished on Such a Large Seale
That Old Methods Are Entirely
Inadequate—Work of Wholesale
I.lfe Saver.
Mr. Andrew Carnegie has fixed the
standard of reward for the saving of
human life at one medal for each
life saved. This method may answer
in a ease where only one life Is
saved, hut the business of life sav
ing.. like everyth'ng else In these
days, la now conducted on a large
scale and some new method of
ward must he devised to cover the
case of the wholesale life saver,
For years Col. Frank A. Dilling
ham has been actively engaged in
the business of life saving hy means
of hla Plant Juice remedies, which
have come aa a life buoy to thous
ands ot men and women who were
shout to be eneulfed In the sea of
death. And today residents of Val
dosta are showing their anprec'at'on
of these great life-saving remedies
bv such statements as the following-
"Two weeks ago I was flat on mv
hack, where I had heen brought bv
vhat mv nhvatetan pronounced
chronic Inflammation of the liver. I
had heen a Rufferer from this dis
ease for some time, but did not bo-
come alarmed over my condition until
a few months ago. when It deve’oned
thatotherorgans had ecome Involved
and mv condition was serious. I suf
fered frightful nalns In mv shoulder
and arm and was never without a
splitting headache My skin wes
covered with dnrk-hrowu spots and
I was unable to digest the food of
an Invalid. I had little strength
left when I bought a bottle of Dil
lingham's Plant Juice and began tak
ing It. Tt was three or four davs be
fore I noticed any change In mv con
dition: the first Indication of Im
provement being the dfaannearance
of the coating on mv tongue nnd the
return of my appetite. I also be
gan to obtain more restful sleep as
the pains disappeared. On the fifth
day after T started taking Plant
Juice I was able to leave mv bed.
and today I am as well and strong
ft. every ixtremlty. There! a * T * TW Fas. I know that I conld
not have lived much longer with
Valdosta Buggy and Waggon Works.
6-7 i lt-wlt
WANTED—;Uphol stering of all
kinds. Valdosta Buggy and Wagon
Works. W. Valley St.
6-7-d4t-wit
BID8 WANTED—We are’ ready to
receive bldi for the F. I. McRee
farm place. Mrs. F. I. McRee, and
W. E. Thomas, Executors.
6 2 d aw tf.
STRAYED OR STOLEN^SlX
shouts, two blue and four black,
mark swallow fork in right ear and
under bit In left. Reasonable re
ward for return o- Information. J. T.
Palin d-w-tf
NOTICE,
From June 1st the name of the
leading repair business now as
Jas. Chambers & Co., will be changed
and will hereafter be run under tho
name of Valdosta Buggy & Wagon
Works. Thanking you for your past
patronage hoping the continuance of
same we are yours to serve. Val
dosta Buggy and Wagon Works,
■Ins. Chambers and W. H. Boring.
6-7-d4t-wIt
Notice.
I have sold an Interest In my fish
business to Mr. P. E, Kirk, and the
firm will be known In future aa Ball
& Kirk. The business will he con
ducted as heretofore and at the old
stand. Mr. Kirk la well known In
Valdosta and has many friends. He
will be in active charge of the busi
ness during the summer.
All parties indebted to D. II. Bell
will please pay same to J. K. Kirk,
D. S. Bell, or Mrs. Toole, our collec
tor.
,tor. Aa ever yours to pleaae,
D. H. BELL.
Valdosta, Ga., June 1, 1911.
6 1 d eod lOt w 4t.
The Georgia & Florida Railway
will hold their train No. 4. for Au
gusta, due to leave Valdosta at 7:50
a. m. until the arrival ofthe G. S. &
F. train No. 2 at 10:40 a. m. on June
9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th.
T. E. HARRIS, Com’l Agent.
Times Want Ads
dfat that. If he were to ,
f fianger- r terrlh’e 1 disease, grdwlne worse
, , 1 nU^dhe time, and Plant Jnlce hip
* ’ e ’t«nrnM mv deepest .gratitude.”
and he-1 Ask yonr druggist for Plant Juice
re la ao much blood pass- or orrter from F A nilllngham. Clu
ing through them to tho heart. The clnnatt, Ohio. Rooklet free. Plant
larger the rein the more Important Juice la |1.00 a bottle, six for $5 no
it is. Jho freer the passage of blood Liniment 25c. Healing Salve 25c.
through' the Yolna the better for the .Medicated soap 10c. Exprpss pre-
Man. The ayatem of roads in a field on orders of $5.00 or:more,
county are like the veins In the body.
There are large ones and small ones.
All should be kept In good condition,
but if ny are to be neglected It would
he better to neglect those that are
not so vltaL
The Timet wants to see good
roads all over Lowndes county and
we believe we are going to see them.
We will never see them If the road WANTED TO BUY—Vinegar and
gang 4* kept moving from one end of Syrup Barrels nnd Kegs, Beer and
thecounty to tho other every week or Ginger Ale Bottles, Scrap Iron,
two to swap sand and do patch Brass, Copper. Highest Price Paid,
work. We doubt If there Is a roadj™- Davla Vinegar Works, Allan-
In the county as poorly kept as iti^' ** u - 5-3_- W .
was ten or fifteen years ago. It Is* GINNER WANTED—A steady
by comparing the worked and un- so ^ er man for sea island cotton
.... ... .. Address Box 86, Cecil, Ga.
worked roads with the new ones g 3 w 2t
that makes them seem so ibad.
LOST—Liver colored pointer,
brown head and white spots on
body. Answers to name of Fanny.
Had on narrow black collar with
*mall hitch-^hain attached. Suita
ble reward for return to Homy Dor
ter, Ham’s St.iMe tMii-w'-’i.
„ „ r _ . . . , FOR SALE OR TRADE—A fine
However, we are for good roada, bIooded q, ay stamoni we , )fht
all over the county Just as fast as pounds, age 7 years; price. 21,000.
they can be built We hope that Mr.
Lias and other good citizens who
happen to lire on unworked roads,
will be patient—or aa patient a> pos
sible—until the road gang can reach
them.
Jake Wilson Get* la Months.
•Jake Wilaon, the young negro
who stole a suit of clothes belong
ing to Professor Elkins, was arraign
ed before Judge Cranford yesterday
and he plead guilty to the theft He
was given twelve months on the
gang In default of a fine of 2100.
He did not pay the fine so he will
go on the county gang.
Telephone your orders for a nice
fat mutton roast for dinner tomor
row, to H. D. and W. L. Jones' mar
ket- Phones 49 and 219.
Saved Her Own Life.
Lebanon Junction, Ky.—Mrs.
Minnie Lamb, of this place, says: "I
bllevo I would have been dead by
now, had It not been for Cardul. I
haven't had one at those bad spells
since I commenced to use your med
icine." Cardul Is a specific medicine
for the Ills that women suffer. Car-
dnl Is mads from harmless vege
table Ingredients. It la safe, reliable
medicine,-successfully used by iuf-
fering women for more than fifty
years. Try It today. For sale at all
druggists.
P. O. Box 253, Perry, Fla. G 3 sw tf.
FOR SALE—Long and short sta
ple cotton gin outfit, Including gal
vanized Iron house, 6 English Gina,
1 70-saw G 1 ”, press, elevator, aya-
tem for eacu outfit. Engine ana
Boiler, all pulley, shafting belts, oto.
An Ideal outfit at a bargain. Ed L.
Thomas, Valdosta, Ga . 2-27wtf
FOR SALE—100 H. P. High Pres
sure Boiler, 35 Ton Locomotive,
Franklin Air Compressor 14, 100-
H. P. Feed Water Heater. 20 H. P.
Portable Engine and Boiler; 6x24
Planer and Matcher. All sizes and
kinds of locomotives, boilers, engines,
b&tance wheels and machlnery.They
must he sold, get our prices. Valdos
ta Foundry and Machine Co. Valdosta
Ga 6-27-wtf
FOR SALE—2
Ham’s Stable.
Good Mules at
6-27-wtf
AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE—Two
Reo Runabouts, 1909 model, 2300;
1910 model 2350., Apply to P. T.
Knight or R. W. Starling, Hahlra,
Ga 5-9-w-tf
FOR SALE—One first clasa Milli
nery Business, In good condition.
Will sell cheap and give right party
splendtd terms. Write at once.
W. M. Otddens, Tlfton. Oa. 5-23-w5t
FOCND-^-On~West Valley street
the beat place In the city to bars
that auto or buggy top cushion or
any kind of upholstering done.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County.
Will be sold, within the legal
hours of sale to the highest bidder
for cash, before the door of the City
Hall, of Valdosta, on the first Tues
day in July, 1911, the following de
scribed land to-wlt: A certain tract
of land in the city of ValdoBtn, lying
along a ditch which was cut by the
city of Valdosta, beginning near the
Lake Park road running In a wester
ly direction In the southern part of
the city to the main run of Duke’s
Bay at the corner of the land of
B. W. Bentley, said land being more
fully described as follows: Begin
ning at the property line between
J. Y. Wisenbaker and J. A. Dasher,
Jr., running along said ditch above
described two thousand five hundred,
hnd thirty-two feet, the same being
a strip or parcel of land along the
south side of said ditch extending
two hundred and ten feet south of
Bald ditch, the same being In tho
shave of a parallelogram. Said
land levied on aa tho property of
J. A. Dasher, Jr., to ealisfy an exe
cution Issued on the 2Gth day of
April, 1911, hy the City Clerk ot the
Council of Valdosta, to satisfy a
drainage tax duly asaessed by said
Council on said land.
This 8th (lay of Juno 1911.
C. DAMPIER, Chief of Police.
GEORGIA—Lowndes County.
Will be sold at the Court House
door In eald county, on the first
Tuesday In July, 1911, within the
legal houra of sale, to-wlt: Lots of
land number* 173 and 196 In tho
16th land district of said county,
containing four hundred and ninety
(490) acres each, more or less, with
Improvements thereon, said land
levied on ns the property of N. K.
Fry to satisfy an execution Issued
on the 17th day of June, 1910, from
the City Court of Valdosta In favor
of Varn & Burnett against N. K.
Fry.
This the 8th day of June, 1911.
J. E. CORNTO, Sheriff.
Instead of Liquid
Antiseptics! Peroxide
many people are now using
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
The new toilet germicide powder to bo
dissolved in water as needed.
For all toilet and hygienic uses It !a
better and more economical.
To cleanse and whiten the
teeth* remove tartar and I
prevent decay.
To disinfect the mouth, de
stroy disease germs, and
purify the breath.
To keep artificial teeth and [
bridgework clean, odorless
To remove nicotine from the teeth and
purify the breath after smoking.
To eradicate perspiration and Dody
odors by sponge bathing.
The best antiseptic wash known.
Relieves and strengthens tired, weak,
Snfiamedeyes. Heals sore throat, wounds
and cuts. 25 and 50 cts. a t>ox. druggists
or by mall postpaid. Sample Free*
THK PAXTON TOILKTCO^Bostoh.IWam.
REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.
■Mrs. WiKiLow’i Soothing Bvmcr b*» been
used for over SIXTY YEARS by MIU.IOMS of
MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCES^J^
Wiaslsjr's Soothing Syrup," and t
bind. Twenty-five cent* a bottle.