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TO THE LADIES:
' -I
YOU ARE COURDI ALLY INVITED TO CALL jg
ASPECT MY LINE OF FANCY |
s Newest|Fall|
1 Millinery
P NOW ON DISPLAY IN MY STORE IN S
§ SON AIR HOTEL SLOCK. CORNER C?
j MRS. REYNOLDS.)
4 | H »H41 ******** W4-H-H ■t -I-I-I-H-H-t -I-H-H-H f
■: Flint River Lumbes Co.
BAINBRIDQE, QEOROIA.
Manufacturers af First Class
LUMBER
Gompiete House Bills
Your Patronage Solicited. |
i f
me miiiiiAN Bros.
COPPER WORKS!
CORNER
Price and Liberty Streets.
SAVANNAH
tattles, Stills, Worms, Caps, Arms and Patch Copper
Always on hind and Repairing 1 done promptly,
TURPENTINE STILLS OUR
The Portable Saw Mill is the Coding Will.
OliR MILL IS THE COSfllaC
PORTABLE MILL.
It is a portable mill that is really portable. Makes perfect
lumber. Capacities 2,000 to 15,000 feet per day.
TAKE YOUR MILL TO THE LOGS.
Can be set and ready to saw in two hours. Variable Fric
tion Cable Feed. Stationary Miiis. any capacity. Portable
and Stationary Engines, Railway. Mill ar i Factory Supplies.
WRITE US TO-CAY.
BACON & COLLINS SUPPLY CO., „
ALBANY, GEORGIA ======
am
FACTS ABOUT MAKING TEA.
fapanese Way Is Best, Explains an Ex
pert In the Trade.
Remarks made recently by a man
who has acquired some prominence
in the tea trade and who passed
Borne years in Japan may be of inter
est to some to whom they come as
hitherto unknown facts.
“There are two ways to make tea,”
•aid the dealer in that commodity,
crossing his legs and squinting his
left eye reflectively—“the Japanese
way and the other way.” Whether
or not tea is harmful may depend
entirely on which of these entirely
different methods is employed.
“A small platter or bowl is an in
dispensable part of every Japanese
tea set. In this the water to be
used in the process is heated, not to
the boiling point, but to a poiri as
near it as may be without actually
reaching it. The native expert wiU
bend over the little sizzling nre,
testing the degree of heat impaired
to the water in the bowl by delicate
ly fingering the outside of this re
ceptacle from time to time, even
while carelessly talking. When he
becomes at last satisfied that the de
sired end has been attained he pours
the warm water on to his tea leaves
end lets it stand for from three to
five minutes. He then pours off the
liquid iuto his teapot, and the result
is the mild aromatic stimulant much
prized as being genuine Japanese
tea.
“The ‘other way’ is very well
known in this country. It consists
in pouring -boiling water over the
leaves and letting the mixture steep
for an indefinite period. By this
means the tannin which is contained
in the tea is brought out and a dark
amber colored liquid is produced.
It is the tannin which is responsible
for the long crusade against indul-
in the beverage. This is the
[urious principle.' Chemically
there is no difference between this
tannin and that which is used in
preparing leather for the market.
No wonder the ‘inner man' rebels.
“The average American, however,
cannot wait and watch throughout
the time required in the preparation
of the Japanese drink, and a prac
tical substitute must be suggested
if he is to enjoy its harmlessness
and flavor. My experience has been
that if boiling water be used and al
lowed to stand only a minute and is
then poured off a decoction is ob
tained which is very similar to the
oriental in every way. Such « drink
is mild at best, but it has the value
of being physically undetrimentai.
Should there be any one, however,
who in opinion resembles the old
woman who stated that she didn't
like her tea strong and never let it
steep more than fifteen minutes it is
to be feared that no substitutes will
be accented.”
Britishers Do Not Flatter.
A Boston lady who had been re
ceived with much favor by the Folk
lore society in London rather ques
tioned the sincerity of her warm re
ception and said she supposed, like
the French people, the English flat
ter. “Not at all/’ was the protest
of a London friend. “You need not
consider it possible for an English
person to flatter.” And then she
gave an instance. Some one looking
at a painting said to the artist whose
picture it was, “It isn't so bad, you
enow.” “Now don’t be fulsome,”
Why She Forgst.
“Bridget, I want a pound of
rteak, a bag of salt, two ounces of
pepper, a loaf of bread and a pound
of butter. Do you think you can
remember them all, or shall I write
them down?”
“Sure, ma’am, I can remember
one by the other. When I have
bread, I know I want butter, and
when I have steak I know I want
pepper and salt.”
“All right. Go and don’t be
long.”
Bridget was not long. She was
back in a very short time, but with
an empty basket.
“Why, where is the dinner,
Bridget ?”
“I couldn’t remember one of
them, ma’am.”
“Why, I thought you could re
member each article by the one be
fore it ?”
“Faith, ma’am, I had nothing to
remember the first one by!”—Lon
don Tit-Bits.
There Is nothing more distressing than an itching, burn-
! ing skin disease, and upon the return of warm weather those
! who are afflicted with skm troubles find the symptoms appear-
' ing and know that they will be tormented through the hot
summer months. The blood is heated with humors and acrid matter, and as they are f -
to the surface the skin seems to be on fire. The treatment of skin diseases with ext
nal applications is all wrong, because they do not reach the trouble which is in th ^
ACNE,*
tetter,
eczema,
PSORIASIS
salt RHEUM
me Dinner's Climax.
The seedy diner wa3 enjoying him
self vastly. “Waiter,” he called,
“fe^ch a nice piece of boiled turbot.”
The dish was obtained, placed be- )
fore the customer, consumed, and ■
then he called again, “Waiter, fetch j
a choice portion of curried fowl—
and, oh, .waiter, fetch another bottle j
of wine.”
The bill mounted up, but still the j
seedy one called the waiter to fetch
one dainty after another. At last
he. lit a* fragrant cigar and sat back.
“Waiter,” he called, “fetch”—
“Yes, sir,” said the waiter; “fetch
you your bill?” *
“No,” came the languid answer.
“Fetch a policeman. I havep-’t got a
penny!”—London News
tne blood,
covet
THE ITCHING WAS ALMOST UNEEARaSL'-
Deax Sirs—My body broke out with a rash o- M
•which in spite of all efforts to cure continued to ptl< *
The itching, especially at night, was simply f e -' r Z° rs *
would almost disappear at times, only to retu-n'nT’ U
than ever. I had tried many highly recommended n ° rs *
rations without benefit, and hearing of S. S. S dsterM^
to give it a fair trial, and was inexpressibly dehehul!
when a few bottles cured me entirely, removing » tW
blemish and pimple from my body. I shall not fail to™*
ommend S. S. S. whenever an opportunity ocours to dntt
Escondido, Cal. l. Mar.no
The most such treatment can be expected to do is, allay the itching and ourumw
up the trouble for awhile, but as soon as it is left off the disease returns.
All food taken into the body contains, in some form, the elements necessary * l0 srsta'
the different parts. One portion is used for
the making of blood, another for muscle*
one for bone, still another for fat, and so on.
After ~ these different properties are ex
tracted from the food there still remains a
portion that is useless, or waste matter,
which is intended to be disposed of through
the natural channels of bodily waste, the
Liver, Kidneys and Bowels. At this season
of the year, however, these organs become
torpid, dull and sluggish, and fail to perform this duty, and these accumulations remain in
the system and sre absorbed by the blood to ferment and sour, producing burning acids and
acrid humors. The blood cannot properly nourish the system while in this impure condition
and begins to throw off these acids through the pores and glands of the skin, producing Acne
Eczema, Tetter, Psoriasis, Salt Rheum and skin diseases of every description.
ECZEMA appears usually with a slight redness of the skin, followed by pustules from
which there flows a sticky fluid that dries and forms a crust, and the itching is intense. It
is generally on the back, breast, arms, legs and face,though other parts of the body maybe
afflicted. In TETTER the skin dries, cracks and bleeds, and is often very painful. The acid
in the blood dries up the natural oils of the skin, causing a dry, feverish, hardened condition
and giving it a leathery appearance. AGNE makes its appearance on the face in the form of
pimples and black-heads, and is particularly disagreeable because of its unsightly appear
ance, while PSORIASIS, a scaly disease, comes in patches on different parts of the body.
One of the worst forms of skin disease is SALT RHEUM• It discharges a watery fluid, form
ing sores and producing intense itching. <*The head and face are the parts usually affected,
and sometimes the hair falls out and a mass of sores forms on the scalp.
) These and all skin diseases are di^p to the same cause—burning acids and humors in
the blood, and until this vital fluid is cleansed and made pure they will continue. The best
treatment for all skin diseases is S. S. S., a remedy that is purely vegetable, being made en
tirely from roots, herbs and barks, and acts directly on the blood with a cleansing, healing
effect. It neutralizes the acids and purifies the blood so that the skin, instead of being
blistered and burned by the fiery fhgkis, is nourished by a supply of cooling, healthy blood.
It goes down into the circulate* vsa Forces out every particle of waste or foreign matter,
builds up the blood and cures all skin diseases promptly
and permanently. S. S. S. does not leave the least par
ticle of the poison for future outbreaks, but entirely rids
the blood of the cause for all skin diseases.
S. S. S. tones up the system and regulates the
Liver, Kidneys and Bowels so that they will carry off
the natural waste and refuse matter through the propr
channels, instead of leaving it to be absorbed by the
blood. Nothing equals S. S. S. in the treatment of these troubles and for building up the
general health. Write for our treatise on skin diseases and any medical advice you wish.
We make no charge for either. 9 THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, W.
TRADE MARK
MADE
„ WITH
FISH
E Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
tcod the test 25 years. Average Annual Sales over One and a Half Ming
es. Does this record of merit appeal to you? No Core, No Pay.
Enclosed with every bottle is a Tea Cent. of Grove’s Black Root. Liver Fills. ^
Base
T5« Formui i t #
Grov
1i
? tb 3 storv i
WS *
-i ' JiJA
1 Cure
*- i—tSKi medicine „ c- .hi., spirituous liquid, oi a pleasure fitter tesie, made ol
Fluid Extract PERUVIAN BARK Fluid Extract POPLAR
tDvtj EWart* rafCXLY ASH d***
Fluid Extract BLACK ROOT
Fluid Extract DOG WOOD BARK
It Cures the Chills that
TR Best General Tonic.
Fluid Extract PRICKLY ASH j*
Fluid Extinct SARSAPAJULL'*
w Tonics Pon’tC nre '
Care, No Pay. Price, '