The Albany daily herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1891-190?, June 21, 1906, Image 7

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Men’s Summer Underwear $5.00 grade reduced to $4.00 grade reduced to $3.50 grade reduced to $3.00 grade reduced to Boys’ Oxfords $5.00 values reduced to $4.00 values, reduced to $3.50 values reduced to $3.00 values reduced to $2.50 values reduced to $2.25 values reduced to $5.00 grade reduced to $4.00 grade reduced to $3.50 grade reduced to $3.00 grade reduced to Misses’ and Children’s Oxfords $2.75 values reduced to $2 $2.50 values reduced to $1 $2.25 values reduced to $1 $2.00 values reduced to $1 $1.75 values reduced to $1 $1.50 values reduced to $1 $1.25 values reduced to.. ! $2.50 quality at $2.00 quality at $1.75 quality at $1.50 quality at $1.00 quality at 75c quality at.. Infants’ Oxfords $1.25 values reduced to $1.00 values reduced to 90c values reduced to.. DISSOLUTION The Well Known Firm of C. ft. Davis & Co. Mr. i. S. Coles Retires. I As stated above Mr. J. S. Coles has decided to retire from the firm of C. R. Davis & Co. . This necessitates solution and consequently a sale. The entire stock must be converted, at once, into cash as nearly as possible. With season just in its height, with this great stock to select from and the known character and quality of our goods to you isn’t it the part of wisdom to supply yourself for some time to come. It is needless for us to eulogize our here—ask anyone who has put them to the test. We’ll risk their opinion Owing to the nature of this sale and the extremely low prices we must make these rules and shall adhere them without exception: NO GOODS CHARGED. Nothing Sent On Approval. Any Article Exchanged, Or Money Refunded if Not Satisfactory. Sale begins Saturday, June 3rd. A partial list of the good things follows: Here’s Where a Dime Makes a Noise Like a Dollar Men’s Oxfords Ladies’ Oxfords Straw Hats $6,00 values reduced to .$5.15 $5.50 values reduced to .$4.75 $5.00 values reduced to .$4.25 $4.00 values reduced to. $3.25 $3.50 values reduced to $2.95 $5.00 values reduced to .'$4.2,5 $4.00 values reduced to $3.25 $3.50 values reduced to $2.98 $3.00 values reduced to $2.55 $2.50 values reduced to $2.15 $2.00 and $2.25 values reduced to. .$1.85 $5.00 $4.00 $3.50 Felt Hats . . .$3.85 $1.00 values reduced to . 83c $3.30 75c values reduced to . 55c .'. .$2.85 50c values reduced to ‘. . 42c .. .$2.25 ELASTIC SEAM DRAWERS Per pair . 41c .. .$4.00 Bags and Suit Cases .. .$3.50 $3.50 values reduced to. .$2.50 ... .$3.00 $4.00 values reduced to .$3.00 .. .$2.65 $4.50 values reduced to .$3.50 $7.00 values reduced to .$5.95 .. .$1.65 TrunKs ...$1.55 $ 5.00 kinds reduced to.. .$4.00 .. .$1.35 $ 6.00 kinds reduced to, .$5.00 .. .$1.25 $ 7.50 kinds reduced to .$6.25 ... 85c $ 9.00 kinds reduced to... .$7.50 ... 55c $10.00 kinds reduced to .$8.00 THE ALBANY DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1906. HIS SYMPTO A CROWNING ACHIEVEMENT IN WATER. deck WATER WATER BEER WATER We keep the BEER pure instead of the AIR j ■ l li' As every one knows, beer is a saccharine product, and when ex posed, germs literally swarm to it, thrive, and multiply in millions. This causes fermentation in the stomach and miakes you bilious. Just here we will state that germ infection is an absolute impossibility in AMERICAN QUEEN Cooling is the vital point, and this.is how it should bd done: We use a system of double pipjng, WHERE THE BEER FLOWS THROUGH INNEJi PIPES, SURROUNDED BY large water pipes. It is then cooled in ammonia by the very same process. No air touches it. It is protected even from the so-called 1 ‘filtered” air, and this is your sole safeguard, i Hundreds of diseases are traceable to a germ basis, and perhaps to germ-laden .beer. How is the beer cooled which you drink? Corfipare it with our 'methods for your stomach's i sake. Acme Brewing Co., Majbon, ca. Read our next advertisement on "Cleanliness and Sterilizing.” Thirty prominent Albanian fined for using too much WATER. Serves them right, they should use Flint Rock It’s a Ginger Ale. And there is no fine for using too much. Made only by IA BOTTLING Albany, Ga.' ALBANY TELEPHONES: Office 30. Manager 112. F. O. Ticknor, Manager. Directors: Jno. D. Twiggs, S. B. Brown, M. Weslosky, J. R. Whitehead, T. M. Carte'', A. W. Tucker, Largest and Oldest In surance Agency in South Georgia. .Representing 25 of the largest and strongest Insurance Companies in business. Insurance against Fire, Lightning and WindStorms. Large Lines, SpeciaLHaz- ards, Gin houses ancFcoun- try property solicited. Hlb MASTER’S VOICE ” Victor Talking Machines Sold on easy payments. New Records each month.;; Just the thing to take with; 1 you on your summer trip.; Consult the Oracle. We invite you to hear the latest records. Lonsberg’s Book & Music House. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ (Ellis Parker Butler in the Saturday Evening Post.) Did you ever lionr nn amateur at sickness describe his symptoms? Tho small man walked Into the physician’s office, trying to look us 1C he was not ashamed of asking advice. He took a seat Immediately In front of the doc tor, "Now, doe,” he begun glibly, "I'm not sick. I’m never sick a day In tho year. Don’t know what sickness Is, but I've got n little pnln. Not that It worries me at all. I don’t worry about such things, and I guess I have my share of them. But It Isn’t like mo to worry. I'm not built that way. I go along nnd don’t worry, no matter how sick I am, and I guess I am sicker than most men a good part of the time. But I don't let on. I’m used to It. But this pain lias got mo worried. That’s a fact. I'm worried—nearly worried to death. It would worry anyone. Noth ing serious, of course, hut pretty se vere. Fact Is, I can’t stand It any long er. If you knew how I suffer with this pnln! , But It don’t worry me. I don’t let It. And It’s nothing' to worry about. Just one of these, little aches, I guess, that come and go. Fact is, f was ashamed to come to a doctor for such a .little thing. I don’t mind it. Very little pain, you know. Can hardly feel It, but my wife worries. She would have me come to see you. “You see, doc, the pain Is right here In my neck. Seems to be right In my Adam’s apple. It feels like a pin. That’s It exactly; like a pin sticking Into me. Just that sharp, pricking pain, but larger. You know what I mean. Feels like a knob In there. Like a round, polished knob, some thing like a door-knob, pressing all the time. It Isn’t a pain, understand. It’s an ache. A cold, aching sensation, like a snowball. Yes, sir, that describes It exactly. Just like a snowball, only the thing throbs all the time, and It burns. Why, It’s red-hot. Just like a red-hot poker. You know what I mean. As If I had swallowed a red-hot poker, and It was red-hot clear down Into my chest, but darting back and forth like a shuttle, or a bolt of lightning. I don’t know whether you catch Just what I mean, do<v hut you can imagine how a bristle-brush would feel if you swallowed It. A brush with bristles all around It, like a.ptpe-olenner. That gives yotl the Idea exactly. It’s just that sort of tickling sensation, as if I had swallowed something- soft and fuzzy, like a wool mitten. I tell you, It has got me worried, doc. Scared stiff,-1 might say. “Now, I don’t want you to think I’m worried about It I wouldn’t be If It wasn’t so persistent. It’s one of these persistent pains, that comes and goes. Feels like a penny had got lodged there and was aching. Ong of these sharp, twinging pains, like rheuma tism or toothache. Not a jumping toothache, but the slow, steady kind, like a corn. You know whal I mean. Sort of a dull ache, kind of burning. I tell you. I’m dreadfully frightened. My wife said It was nothing, hut I knew hotter. It seems to be In the back of my nock. That’s what frightens me. It. reminds me of spinal meningitis, or consumption—-as If I had appendicitis In my neck, only it’s lower down. It, seems to be In my chest. I'm afraid of these pains that stay right In one place. They are so apt to get chronic. “That’s what 1 don't like about this pnln of mine. It’s so chronic. If It Isn’t In one place It's in another. Sort of shoots all around. You know what I moan. Dashes around everywhere. Some days It’s In the back of my head and then In my lungs, and some days I don't feel it at all. I can’t quite de scribe It, but it is what I would call a bitter pain—a titter, sour pain, kind of sweet and acrid, like Morocco leath er or banana. You see. f don’t want you to make any mistake about It: I want you to get It right. I want you to know exactly what I mean. You know how colic feels? Well, It isn't anything like that. “1 should say It was more like a crimson pain. Sort of a greenish crimson. Nearly blue, you know. Kind of flashing, like an electric light or a match. Sort of an empty feeling, as If there was a void there, with some thing In it. Something round, with sharp points, like a square chunk of lead, only harder. More Ilk; granite, or one of these long, dry crusts of bread, thin and narrow, hut rough. “Now, Doc, you know just how It is. Those are the symptoms, and nil I want is just a Bmall prescription to cure It up. That’s all! Something like a pill, or a dose of some kind. I guess a plaster would be tho right thing. One of these plasters with holes In them. You know what I mean. I don’t want anything that would be hard to take. It Isn’t worth It, for a little thing like this. If I let It alone, It would cure Itself. What I want Is something to rub on, like witch-hazel, or Iodine, or something of that kind. But If you say ‘operate’ I'm willing. I think, myself, an operation Is what It needs. Cut out the tonsils, you know, or fumigate It; or cauterize It. Some thing of that sort." Constipation 'makes tho cold drag along. Get It out of you. Take Ken nedy's Laxative Honey and Tar cough syrup. Contains no opiates. Albany Drug Co., Hllsmun-Sale Drug Co. :: THE BEST ADVICE ,, is always the right, kind of advice. • > When you have eye trouble and ;; need glasses and need the ser- ,, vices of a scientific optician, you ■ ■ want to go to one you know. We ; ’ are the leading opticians and you ,, get the very best of service that is to be had in the South. Ey’es scientifically ezamined free. Phil Harris, Leading Optician. D. NEUilAN, UNDER THE OPERA HOUeE. Three Million Women Who May Manton Patterns Are Loyal To “Dressmaking at Home” No other magazine in the woman’s field can replace it. The Dressmaking Pub lishing Co. wishes to increase its patrons to five million and therefore offer the following inducement for subscribers: Any lady buying two May Manton Patterns and paying" 30c additional will get the magazine to her address for one year. This offer is only for a limited time. I want to see every lady in this city to be a subscriber. D. Neuman, Agent for May Manton Pattern!. FOR RENT—A desirable -cottage on Fine Btreet; possession given at once. Apply M. A. Blum. it