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It’s & Ginger Ale!
jmm* f,
"imulates the body and not
j-uc head,
Aids Digestion.
Try It!
Sc the glass at all soda
founts or served in 5c bottles
at stores.
—MADS ONLY BY—
Georgia
Bottling Works,
Albany, Ga.
A HOSPITAL TALK
BY PASTOR RICHARDS.
YOUR pHILOREN'S EYES.
. Many parentB are culpably negligent
of their children's eyes, early attention
to whloh would very often obviate life
long annoyances and possibly Injury
to physical health.
If a child of yours complains that
he. can'not see clearly, that he has dull
pains In the region of the eyes, or that
he Is subject to headaches; or If he
- leers, looks at objects aBkance dr with
partly closed eyes, he Is suffering from
some defect of vision, and It Is your
parental duty to at once consult an
oculist, lest your negligence or Indif
ference may result In permanent In
jury.
Always have your children’s eyes
examined before sending them to
school.
The examination of children’s eyes
calls for special tact, as Veil ns pro
fessional skill. If they do not need
glasses, I will tell you so.
See
Dr.Cl.Hutchason
i
Albany's Leading Optician, Davls-Bx-
chango Bank Building.
Two
Dyspeptics
If you are too fat it Is because your food
turns to fat Instead of musole—strength.
If you are too lean the fat producing foods
that you eat aro not properly digested and
fciaimUfttid.
Lean, thin, stringy people do not have
enough Pepsin In the stomach, while fat
people have too much Pepsin and not
•nough Panoreatlne.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
•ontalns all the digestive Juices that are
found In a healthy stomach, and In
exactly those proportions necessary to
enable the stomach and digestive organs
to digest and assimilate ajlfoods that may
be eaten. Kodol Is nor only a perfect
dlgestant, but it le a reconstructive, tis
sue building tonic as well. Kodol cures
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach,
Heartburn, Palpitation of the Heart and
Constipation. You will like it
Digests What You Eat
Rests the stomach, rebuilds the
tissues and gives firm flesh.
RSfSsKSl
I Mil.HMml iln. I I feOtgj
L.t-
.SaWItt
~.s.a.
For Sale by Albany Drug Co.
Htleman-8ala Drug Co.
and
0 Brought Down the House.
The Boy and the Cow on the stage
Tuesday night
Was to the crowd a very novel sight.
The Boy tried in vain to get the Cow
to stand,
But the Cow was not In humor, and
he yelled, to beat the band:
"This old Cow belongs to the Enter
prise 8tore!f
Of course, the little fellow was all in
a flutter,
Or perhaps he might have said a little
bit more
About the richness and quality of the
old Cow's butter,
ThO “Fox River” Butter, at the Enter
prise Store. i
Only 35 cents per pound.
: OEO. H. CARROLL, Manager.
Editor Herald:
It Is pretty generally known that I
have recently been a patient In the
great Roper Hospital at Charleston,
S. C„ and It occurs to me that as Al
bany Is making tin effort to secure
one of these most'benign institutions,
It would not be out of place for me to
make, tonight, at the prayer-meeting
of the Baptist church, what I shalll
call “a hospital talk,” based upon my
fresh experience and observations in
hospital work. The public Is cordially
Invited, as It Is my desire to create
“hospital sentiment."
Services begin promptly at 7:8V),
lastlpg not longer than one hour.
.Please say this for me.
Very sincerely yours,
WM. L. RICHARDS,
Pastor Baptist Church.
P. S. Let no one be uneasy; the
"talk" will be gospeF-Chrlst’s gospel
—through and through. It was Jesus
that established the first hospital.
By the way,' all doctors, druggists—
their patients and patrons, are most
especially Invited to be present. That
Invitation' covers the town—the whole
town. For we are all doctors and
druggists and patients and patrons’.
W. L. R.
Albany Decorating Co.,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
Wall Paper, Burlaps,
Room Mouldings.
Rumney Bldg. ‘Phone 898,
THE PLANET MERCURY.
Ilkt Venaa sad For Like Cnnse, It Is
Now a Dead World.
Mercury Is a body devoid, practical
ly U not absolutely, of air, of water
and of vegetation. Consequently it Is
incapable of supporting any of those
higher organisms which we know as
living beings. Its surface Is a vast
desert It is rough rather than smooth.
Whether this roughness be’ dne to
mountains proper or to craters we are
too far away from It to be able
yet to say. The latter Is the more
probable.. Over the greater part of Its
surface change either diurnal or sea
sonal la unknown. Three-eighth* of Its
surface Is steeped in perpetual glare,
three-eighths shrouded In perpetual
gloom, while the remaining quarter
slowly turns between the two. The
planet Itself, as a world, Is dead.
Interesting as Mercury thus proves
to be, the Interest as regards tbe plan
et Itself Is of a rather corpselike char
acter. Less deterrent perhaps Is the
Interest It possesses ’as a part of tbe
life history of the solar system, for
tidal friction, the closing act la the
cosmic drama, has brought It where It
Is. The machine has run down.
Whether It ever supported life upon Its
surface or not, the power to do so has
now fofever passed away. Like Venus
and for like cause, It is now a dead
world. And It was the first thus to
reach the end of Its evolutionary ca
reer, earlier to do so then Venus, In
asmuch as tidal action waB very much
greater upon It than on Venus and con
sequently produced Its - effect more
quickly. Mercury has long been d^ad.
How long, measured by centuries, we
cannot say, but practically for a very
long time. VenuB must have become
so comparatively recently. Both, how
ever, now have finished their course
and have la a most literal sense enter
ed Into their rest.
A Statement from Mr. Crlne.
Referring to the report In yester
day’s Herald of the altercation be
tween Messrs. E. R. Jones and L. J.
Crlne, Mr. Crlne desires us to state
that tbe reporter or his Informant
was mistaken In the statement that
lie (Mr. Crlne) advanced on Jones
with a drawn knife. While admit
ting that he did draw his pocket-
knife, Mr. Crlne says that he (did not
do so until Mr. Jones threatened to
"maul" him and commenced to draw
a pistol on him.
Lat)t night was sloppy enough to
enable the hacks and cabs to do
land-offlce business at about the time
business men were making tbelr way
home for supper.
/ ’ Ask Your -Berber
nbout “Fewer Gallons; Wears Longer.”
Albany Decorating Co.,
Paints, Oils, VarnisheB,
Wall Paper, BurlapB,
Room Mouldings.
Rumney Bldg. ’Phone 393,
Ask the Bartenders
about “Fewer Gallons; Wears Longer."
-Albany Decorating Co.,
Paints, Oils, Varnishes,
Wall Paper, Burlaps,
Room Mouldings. I
Rumney Bldg. - ’Phone 398.
Much interest Is being manifested
in the Chautauqua edition of The Her
ald,- which will appear on Sunday
morning, April 16. It will he the
largest paper ever published In this
part of the Btate, and will be repre
sentative of all that Albftny haa and
Is. For the advertisingTt will carry,
ns well as for the reading matter Its
pages will contain, it will prove an
Intensely Interesting paper.
A Lively Tussle
with that old enemy of the race, Con
stipation, often ends In Appendicitis.
To avoid all serious trouble with
Stomach, Liver and Bowels, take Dr.
King’s Now Life Pills. They perfect
ly regulate these organs, without pain
or discomfort. 26c at Albany Drag Co.
Advertisements to be Inserted In
The Herald must be handed In at the
office by 4 o’clock of the day pre
ceding that on which It Is deBired that
they appear. When copy Is received
later than the time stated, every ef
fort will be made to secure Its In
sertion, but insertion' will not be guar
anteed.
Don
I n’t frown—look pleasant If you
are suffering from Indigestion or sour
stomach, take Kodol Dyspepsia Cure.
Hon. Jake Moore, of Atlanta, Qa.,
says; "I suffered more than 20 years
with Indigestion. A friend recom
mended Kodol. It relieved me In one
day and I now enjoy better health than
for many years." Kodol digests what
you eat, relieves sour stomach, gas on
stomach, belching, etc. Sold by Al
bany Drag Co., Hilsman-Sale Drug Co.
SEEING SICILY.
Ndt to Know Thin bland to Hot to
Know Greece,
There an/ some lands which have al
ways laid a spell upon the mind, upon
the Imagination, upon .the heart. Greece,
abqve all other countries, has entranced
the mind. The Imagination has ever
loved the east—Egypt, tbe Indies, for
gotten Asia, the almost as mysterious
Asia of toddy. For most of us the
home land Is the country of the heart;
for many, It may be, It Is Palestine,
where was lighted the fire at which
tbe hearts of Incalculable millions are
still warmed. Others are content to
say with Emerson In the fine essay on
“Heroism,” "That country Is the fairest
which Is Inhabited by the noblest
minds." But, above all other lands,
there Is one which has at once Impress
ed the mind, the imagination and the
heart of western peoples. When a fa
mous poet declared that on his heart
would be found engraved the word
Italy the words voiced the emotion of
a multitude In every country of Eu
rope and In the great northern con
tinent oversea..
To see Sicily, tile old “Garden of the
Sun,” as the poets have loved to call It,
Is not to see Italy, though there may be
a measure of truth In Goethe’s remark
that uot to know Blclly Is not to know
Italy. In a sense one might more tru
ly say of Sicily that not to know It Is
not to know Greece. In another sense,
however, we have In this most beau
tiful of islands the Intensification of
Italy. Whatever Is most Italian Is in
evidence here, though It Is Italian of
the south and not of the north. What
a gulf divides them Is known only to
those familiar with the whole penin
sula.—William Sharp In Century.
“Ball*" Not Irish.
Those who are not Irishmen some
times trespass on Irish property. A
French cure, preaching about sudden
death, said, “JQius It Is with us—we go
to bed well andiget up stone deadl’’-
An old French lawyer writing of an
estate he bad Joist bought added, “There
Is a chapel upon It In which my wife
and 1. wish to be burled, If God spares
our lives."
A merchant who died suddenly left
In his bureau a. letter to one of bis cor
respondents which he had not sealed.
His clerk, seeing It necessary to send
the letter, wrote at .the bottom, “Since
writing the above I have died.”
A Sentiment and an Autograph.
A certain young lady, so the story
runs, wrote. to F. Marlon Crawford,
the novelist, requesting that he send
her a bit of sentiment and bis auto
graph. The reply was:
Dear Mill A.—When you request a fa
vor that t* of Interest only to yourself,
please Inclose a two cent stamp. There’s
your sentiment, and here’s your auto
graph. F. MARION CRAWFORD.
—Collier’s Weekly.
A Simple Precaution,
Landlady (of country Inn on tbe eve
of a popular holiday to ber daughter,
who Is kneading the dough for a cake)
—Reset, you’d better put a couple of
eggs and a bit of butter Into tbe cake.
It looks as If we were going to have a
storm, and It the townsfolk don’t stir
out tomorrow we shall have to eat'it
ourselves.—From tbe German.
. Language.
Language -Is a solemn thing. ' It
grows out of life—out of Its agonies
and ecstasies, Its wants and Its weari
ness. Ever; language Is a temple In
which the soul of those who speak It la
enshrined.—O, W. Holmes.
Cures Biliousness, Sick
Headache, Sour Stom
ach, Torpid Liver and
Chronic Constipation.
Pleasant to take
Cleanses the system
thoroughly and dears
sallow complexions of
pimples and blotches.
It la guaranteed
SHORT LiVfcU UUGI OHS.
Disease* Which Are Mast Deadly to
the Medical Profession.
The diseases which claim tbe most
victims among physicians relatively to
all males are goat and diabetes, and
there Is a high relative mortality from
diseases of the nervoos system, circula
tory system and. kidneys, says the Sci
entific American.
From the nature of bis habits tbe
pbyBldan Is not subject to accidents,
and, though he Is brought. Into contact
With Infection to. a greater extent than
other men, his preventive meane are
successful and his mortality from In
fection. Is very low. Freedom from pro
longed muscular strains and high blood
tension apparently saves him from
arteriosclerosis, but suicide claims
mnny and so do tbe drug habits ac
quired by tbe nervously exhausted. It
bas been said that three-fourths of
French morphine users are physicians.
The cause of the physician’s early
death Is evidently the excessive uerv-
ous expenditure, Insufficient rest and
defective nutrition, Inseparable from
bis calling, with Its broken and restrict
ed sleep, Irregular hours of work, rest
and meals and worry when lives de
pend upon his Judgment and the lack
of a day of complete relaxation In each
week. The physician who sees his pa
tients every day in the week, month
after month, and cannot learn to forget
them when he goes home merely burns
tbe candle at both ends. He violates
the law observed by every animal, that
there shall be short periods of moder
ate exertion Interrupted by longer peri
ods of rest when repairs are made. It
is not too much work as a rale,’ but
scattered work, which prevents rest.
A severe - cofd that may develop Into
pneumonia over night, can be cured
quickly by taking Foley’s Honey and
Tar. It will cure the most obstinate
racking cough and strengthen your
lungs. The genuine Is In a yellow
package. Hilsman-Sale Drug Co.
SAVED BY COURAGE.
Ah Exciting Adventure With a Maori
Chieftain.
Mr. Becke, the author of "Notes
From My South Sea Log,” tells of his
tutor, who seemed to him the most
heroic man In the world because he
had been through the first Maori- war
and because of an adventure which
there befell him, and which ts given as
follows:
Poor Guy—such was the tutor’s name
—was a lieutenant, and he and two
companies were captured by the
Maoris. They were taken Inside the
Stockade, and the chief, tnklug up oue
of the captured seamen's cutlasses, felt
Its edge and then fixed his keen eyes
on the young officer’s face.
“I shall not harm these two men of
yours,” he said slowly. "They shall go
safely back to your lines If"— He
paused, and a grim smile distorted bis
tattooed face.
“If what?" asked Guy calmly.
“If you will stretch out your right
hand so that I may ent It off at tbe
wrist swiftly, no further harm shall
come to you, and you, too, shall go
free.”
“Will you keep your word?”
“Aye. I, Te Atua Wera, am no liar."
Guy nodded, quietly took off his coat
and held out bis left band.
“Btrlke,” he said.
The chief again smiled. “Thou art
as cunning as thou art brave. I said
the right hand.”
Guy let fall his left and extended his
right arm. Te Atua Wera stepped
back a pace, raised the cutlass—and
struck the point of it Into the ground.
Then he bent forward and gravely
nibbed noses with Guy.
“Go,” he said, "but come back no
more.” 8o Guy and the two sailors
were allowed to return to Despard’s
lines unharmed.
- Given Up to Die.
B. Spelgel, 1204 N. Virginia St., Ev
ansville, Ind., writes: “For over five
years I was troubled with kidney and
bladder affections which caused me
much pain and worry. J lost flesh and
was all run 1 down, and a year ago had
to abandon work entirely. I had three
of the best physicians, who did me no
good, and I was practically given up
to die. Foley’s Kidney Cure was rec
ommended and the first bottle gave
me great relief, and after taking the
second bottle I was entirely cured.”
Why not let It help you? Hilsman-
Sale Drug Co.
HILSMAN-SALE DRUG CO.
Correct Dress
The “Modem Method” system of
high-grade tailoring introduced by
L» E. Hays & Co., of Cincinnati, O n
satisfies good dressers everywhere; |
• All Garments Made Strictly
to Your Measure
at moderate prices. 500 styles of foreign
and domestic fabrics from which to choone. ;
Suffered Twenty Years With Indigestion.
Cured by Kodol Dyspepsia’ Cure.
OFFICE OF
CJje prison Commission of Georgia
CLEMENT A. EVANS,
Commissioner.
,0S ’ S ’ TO fflSran. TOU &.lon.r.
OOODLO* YANOY^ J ’ “‘sJSS'Wsrdsn.
Atlanta, August 10, 1904.
E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, Ill.
Dear Sirs—“I have suffered more than twenty years from Indi-i
geetion. About eighteen months ago I had grown so much worse that
f could not digest a crust of corn bread and could not retain .anything
on my stomach. My heart would beat so fast I could not sleep, It f
times I would almost draw double with pain in the pit of my stomach.
I lost twenty-five pounds; in fact, I made up my mind that I could not
live but a short time, when a friend of mine recommended Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure. I consented to try it to please him and I was better in
one day. I now weigh more than 1 ever did in my lifei and am in better
health than for many years. Kodol did it. I keep a bottle constantly, j
and write this hoping that humanity will be benefited.
Yours very truly,
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the only digestant or combination off
digestants that will digest all classes of food. In addition to this fact,
it contains, in assimilative form, the greatest known tonic and recon- ,|
structive properties. All other digestants and dyspepsia remedies
digest certain classes of food only, and are. lacking in reconstructive
properties. , _ ^
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is prepared at the laboratory of E. C,
DeWitt & Co., Chicago, and is sold by leading druggists everywhere.
)M
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT
The 1906 Kodol Almanac and 200 Year Cal
endar will be sent free on receipt of 2 cents it
postage by addressing E. C DeWitt & Co„
Chicago.
DRINK A BOTTLE
CARBONATED- ’
8. a BROWN A CO, Albany, Ga.
BOTTLED EXCLUSIVELY BY
The Albany Coca-Cola Bottling 0
Everywhere 6c
Ramblers, Tribunes, Racycles.
We point to these Bicycles and chal
lenge their duplicate as to finish, wear
ing qualities and price. Competition in
manufacturing has given ua a
PERFECT BICYCLE
at a nominal cost as compared to for
mer prices. Our bicycles are the best
to be had. Come in and examine them.
Examine the new style tires; couldn’t
be better, could they? Entire wheel A1
and beautiful in finish. Talk bicycle
with us and save money.
B. F. SMITH,
The Leading',Wheelman, Pine Street.
J. S. Davis. t. W. Ventulett
J. S. DAVIS & CO.
IN8URANCE AGENTS
against
FIRE
LIGHTNING
TORNADO.
Agents of the Southern Mutual Insur
ance Co.
Office—Ventulett Building,
I—’Phoftes—343—88—122—•—
JAMES TIFT MANN
Attorney and Counsellor at Law.
Vontulett Bulletins
FOR THE m.
Values in Marble antT’
Granite for artistic work
manship, and th^ finest -1
material in
monument:
Headstones, etc, try
The Albany Marble jn'
Granite Works.
W. H. MILLER, *
* Proprielt j
Accident
Will Happep
Use
SLOANS
LINIMENT
ForSprains,Bruises
Sore Muscles,Cut:
Bums & Scalds
At All Dealers Price2jfJQW‘
Dr. Earl S. Sloan i
Boston NassU.S.A.^e.