Newspaper Page Text
V % ■
“ Natures Gift from the Sunny South”
Shortens your food-Lengthens your life
^5—
Everything about Cottolene is clean and pure from its origin to its comple
tion. Warmed into life by the sun on Southern Cotton Fields, nurtured by
rain and dew, the Cotton plant finally concentrates in its seed that life-
giving and life-sustaining quality which is the basis of Cottolene. Cottolene
makes food nutritious, delicious and healthful. Then think of people using
hog fat when they can get Cottolene ?
FREE ! Send us a two-cent stamp to pay postage and we will mail you a copy of our “Pure Food Cook Book,” edited by Mrs. Mary J. Lincoln,
containing nearly 300 valuable recipes.
Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago
Don’t Worry
If you are sick, don’t worry, but begin at once
to make yourself well. To do this, we but repeat
the words of thousands of other sufferers from
womanly ills, when we say:'
It Will Help You
For 50 years, this wonderful female remedy, has
been benefiting sick women. Mrs. Jennie Merrick,
of Cambridge Citv, Ind., says: “I suffered greatly
with female trouble, and the doctors did no good.
They wanted to operate, but I took Cardui, and it
made me feel like a new woman. I am still using
this wonderful medicine, with increasing relief.”
AT ALL DRUG STORES
ii.rt i C,
FATE OF FISH.
DOCTOR KING
! Ill RDJABLK MOTORS.
•WEST ID ARE Ml L0R0EST LOCATES. REGULAR GRANITES IR K1IC*. |
WE OFFER TOU THE LARGE ARD VALUABLE EXPERIENCE OF TIE LOOSEST
ESTABLISHED ARD MOST RELIABLE S ECIALISTS II TIE MOTR ,
Authorized by tbe state to treet CHRONIC, REH9U AIM PlfM
■ISEASES. We guarantee to refund money if not cure*. AU m-1
clues furnished ready for use—no mercury or Injurious»«cvc m* I
used. No detentien from business. Patients at a die.* fl]
treated by mail end express. Medicines sent ererywh.r*
from gaze or breakage. No medicine sent C. O. D. asl.
■tructed. Charges low. Thousands of eases cured. State
ease and Bend for term*. Consultation FREE end confident
person, or by latter. Cali or write today. Don’t delay.
WCIN i illlta' v ‘ 1 ™
Ntrveut Debility and WtaknassMistrletura MiT
.1 thereroltttfy—tbfulfolly and e»ca.- T re«tm.nt. Nop.ln.iK
•I MMIl, ns-waita*:Issm* by dr.em.er with cnttlBr . bougie.or.oniw _
url»a.pimp 1m *»< biotcliw on thm fmoe^ruihaa oi| neg> . Thousand* cured. Wi euarai
bleediota.kMd,Min. la tkebask, confused We»»l m on«Tlfn<?tP.rn»nentlTcure£ My
tetftfnlneei. bMhfnlne.., .T.nlon tc eocie*r.lpi.i.« th i« Hium.
cured without tko
instrument*. ▲ bow
and no expoauro. Bo
They Never Die a Natural Death, Says
an Observant Fisherman.
“Fish never die a natural death,’’
said an old fisherman who has ob
served as he fished. “If they did.
bodies of dead fish would be floating
on the surface of the water about all
the while, because such bodies if un
molested would have to float.
“I mean, of course, fish in nature
never die a natural death, not fish in
captivity. And perhaps it should not
be called natural death that fish in
captivity die. Their environment in
duces mortality that fiah in their na
tive habitat would escape, and these
causes might be properly classed as
among the accidents that carry the
captive fish off.
“If fish in their native element were
never molested I believe they would
never die. If they had sufficient food,
which would be impossible if they no
longer preyed on one another, there
would be no reason for their dying,
It was to prevent snch uninterrupted
tenure of life that ali fish were made
fiercely predatory if not remorselessly
cannibalistic, as many kinds are.
“A fish’s life is a constantly stren
uous one and one entirely selfish. A
fish lives only to eat and to avoid b
Ing eaten.”—New York Snn.
heredity, — —
A Virginia representative in con
gress says that two ladies in Rich
mond with whom he is well ac
quainted were one day disoussing the
relative longevity of the members of
their respective families.
“I have no doubt,” said one of the
ladies, “that, everything considered,
we Blanks are the most notable fam
ily in Virginia when it comes to a
question of longevity. Do you know,
my father died at eighty-nine, while
my grandfather reached the advanc
ed age of ninety-seven.”
“Is that so?” queried the other
lady. “And which grandfather was
that ?”
“Oh,” replied the first speaker,
“that was the grandfather by my
first husband.”—Harper’s Weekly.
THE WOaST MOSQUITOES.
Maubin, ^arrr.a, Hao the Biggest and
Most Viruient Known.
TRAVELERS GUIDE,
Unsurpassed ir. ali the. world in
number, size and virulent activity
are the mosquitoes of ilauldn. r.
town of Burma, according to \ . C
Scott 0’Cort:*:r. lie ; “O-
first visit to-uluu: V mo--:;
No detentic* tres
.rentee to r i
book M..>
■ efrUeif.roM.looof aeahood.etc., oared tor
L W.MBI
It.* nick11 CM, rector, loet TitaUty
derate* .*4 seteie young *r middle aged wk* err
weekly ead wreeke end mske them fltfor nuurrtege
Enlarged .rise ta the eere * M.
cent leg nerroee debility, wee* a~
of the Derroceyetete. etc., perm.eentlj eared‘ M
oaredtertejOared. Wegwrenteeto refund yourj
■onftfriiiTciiirwnpr •>
Wlddtr Mi Prottltlc. the effect* ud^l^tatMSwittSaWr'
SI™.et&Mrs.-a;sKdFrMjs
ed IP rataletaOdbleedleee aethede. !»«*• «** j Jk.
IDR. KING MEDICAL CO., *’‘atlant*. CA. M
Portable and Stationary
Boilers, SamJWMs
2 STUM ENGINES
Highest grade Ginning Machinery,
Gasoline Engines, Shingle Mills,
Corn Mills and Pumping Outfits to
be had in the entire Strath. Large
stock on hand, best terms, quickest
delivery. It will pay yon to investi
gate our machinery and prices.
,f\
a»a
m
MALLARY BROS. MACHINERY CO. l£
e.
Went by Steam.
“In a certain Canadian town
where I was running a telegraph of
fice in my youth,” said an electri
cian, “a new factory, with a fine en
gine house, was put up. I visited
this factory one day to see the en
gine. The engineer was out, and the
fireman, a new hand, showed me
about. As we stood admiring the
engine together I said:
K 'What horsepower has this en
gine?’
"The fireman gave a loud laugh.
* ‘Horsepower!’ he explained.
-'Why, man, don’t you know that the
machine goes by steam?”’
Beasou is an caper,.nj,- :o -
them under the <•» an ..i.
searchlight cerrie ov.r i! ’. ku
m hordes and '>c:u: y id. --
iistible army even uuww.. .
surface, to see them hant-in? h. f
toons from the w!; ; t? car:-’-;- r.v.
ings, the mosquito
linen and the punka £«;».- ai.d :V
every object on winch r•... v r»-ip
cure a feenrq. is to l ave lived ...
deed. How to continue to live r.f
the novelty of the spectacle uas woi
off is the definite problem that occu
pies every one’s mind in Maubin. i:
is achieved in the main by intro:..I
ing oneself within an iron fortron
of fine mesh. In some houses there
is a special room, a kind of inn
citadel and last refuge, which i.
wholly of iron gauze, and within i.
the master ot the house sits like ..
vanquished lion in n cage.
“To enter this fortress in ad van. i
of the enemy calls for the exerci.-.
of agility of a high order. The door
have swing backs and are made In
close the instant that they are re
lea'sed. Outside them the light cav
airy of the enemy hover in clouds.
The man within, this English::;-:,
in his strange castle, observes y.
approach with furtive and anxiou.-
eyes, and if you be a newcomer l..
begs of you to be careful in entering
Immediately you enter he falls with
an astonishing onslaught upon such
of the enemy as have come in ot;
your Lac:-:, in your hair, in the
creases of your clothes and in an au
rora of cloud about your brows.
“At one end of the chief magis
trate’s house there used to be, when
I was last at Maubin, a long room
thus defended, in which he sat daily
to dispense justice, and great activi
ty in entering was expected of the
prisoner under trial, the assembled
witnesses and the counsel employed
in each case. Many a sentence, it is
whispered, has fallen with enhanced
severity from judicial lips, many i
prisoner has come away with a light
er punishment as the consequent
of his manner of entering the court.'
—Chicago News.
‘Schedule Callahan Line of Boats,
Beginning Sunday, Dee # 39 1907
Will operate the fol owing schedule
i Leave:
Leave:
Bainbridge Sunday, 12 o’k noon.
River Landing, 4:30 p. m.
Arrive:
Apalachicola, Monday, 10 a. m.
Leave:
Apalachicola, Monday at noon.
Arrive
Bainbridge, Tuesday, 4 :30 p. m.
Bainbridge, Thursday, 12 o’k noor
River Landing, 4 :30 p. m.
Arrive:
Apalachicola, Friday 10 a. m.
Leave:
Apalachicola Friday, 12 o’k noon
Arrive:
Bainbridge, Saturday, at 4 p. m-
er Conditions of the River and tbe Weather permitting.
J. W. CALLAHAN, President and General Manager,
BAINBRIDGE, GEORGIA.
Atlantic Coast Line fiai
Notice—Th-se arrivals and departures are given »•< information
and are not guaranteed Effective May DL *
Train No
1.10 a m
1.15 p m
2.15 a m
11.35 a m
7.40 p m
ARRIVALS .
From Montgomery, Dotbon, Troy and western P™ D
From Savannah, Waycross, and Jacksonville.
Train No.
DEPARTURES.
For Waycross, Jacksonville hnu points south
“ “ Savannah and Eastern poin's
<• “ Savannah, Jacksonv’I and points =ou
“ Troy, Do.hon, Montgomery and western p ( > !n
1.40 a m
5.30 a m
1.15 p in
2.15 a m
11.35 am
Pullman sleeping cars on trains between Bainbridge, Montgomery
Savannah and Jacksonville.
Agt, Bainbridge
ProfMMor of Logic—I put my hat
d*wn in this room. I cannot see it
anywhere. There has been nobody in
besides myself. Therefore I am sit
ting on it (He was.)
leeldtktaL
Burs!ey—He claims to be related to
yon and says he can prove it Floyd-
The man's a fool. Rursley—That may
be a mere coincidence.—Smart Set
Mew le TalkeC
Rubinstein, after a concert tour in
Spain, waa asked: “Do yon understand
Spanish T
“No.” he said.
“Then yon had to converse with the
Spaniards in French, I suppose?”
“Not every Spaniard speaks French.”
“Then bow In toe world did yon talk
to them?”
“With the piano,” as Id Rubinstein,
jrith a smile.
Apalachicola Northern Railroad
E. A. FAULHABER, Receiver.
Elegftnt Daily Service Between Rfrer Junction and
^F*Trains running on follow schedule (Central Time).
Train No, 3—South boned.
Leave River Junction 4i0pm
Doittb
Greensboro
4,45 p m
5’00 p m
Juniper
Gnest
5.10 p m
5.20 p m
Hosford
Evans
5.45 p m
5.55 p m
Trump
Sumatra
6.10 p m
7.05 p m
'** Beverly
Arrive Apalachicola
7.35 p m
8.15 p m
Train No. s-Sarthbound. ^ ^
Leave Apalachieota ■
- “ Beverly
** Sumatra
Trump
Evans
Hosford
Guest
Juniper
Greensboro
Dolan
Arrive River Junction
8.05 s ®
8i»»®
9.25 a®
9.40 a *
9.50 a ®
lOiCa ®
10^0*®
10.40 a
10.55
11.30 a ®
V
9
i 8»
Apajacnicoia b.io p m amvc
o'. TncC f i oD8Da
Connects’with all Rail aDd Boat lines at R )veI
the ooat lines at Apalachicola.
J, H. H0D6ES. General Passenger Age
Jer-*-
if/*-' A
-xr . .r iV.