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“ Nature’s Gift from the Sunny South”
Shortens your food-Lengthens your life
-sJbjhiM * V« ]
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
hcg fat when they can get Cottolene ?
FREE 1 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
“My Young Sister”
writes Mrs. Mary Hudson, of Eastman, Miss., “took
my advice, which was, to take Cardui. She was
staying with me and was in terrible misery, but Car-,
dui helped her at once.
It Will Help You
J 30
“Last spring,” Mrs. Hudson continues, “I was
I in a rack of pain. The doctor did no good, so I began
1 to take Cardui. The first dose helped me. Now I
am in better health than in three years.”
Every girl and woman needs Cardui, to cure
I irregularity, falling feelings, headache, backache and
similar female troubles. Cardui is safe, reliable,
I scientific. Try Cardui.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
DOCTOR KINO
K IIImtmmt MCTMS. IlKST IIMEUILIMEST LOCATED. REGULAR ERADIATES II «!!=!*.
IE OFFER TOU THE LARGE AID VALUABLE EXPERIENCE OF THE lOAOU?
ESTABLISHES MO MOST RELIABLE S ECIALISTS M THE SOHtl
Authorized bj the state to treat CHRONIC, HERTOO All Mt
MEASES. We guarantee to refund money if not cured. *U **-
clues furnished ready for use—no mercury or injurious meci.a
need. No detention from business. Patients at a t'.tu
treated by mall and express. Med.elaea sent everywhere
from gaze or breakage. No medicine eent C. O. D. «a)«
■tructed. Charges low. Thousands of cases cured. Slat,
ease and send ter terms. Consultation FREE and confidents
person, or by letter. Call or write today. Don’t delay.
radically cored without «a* ,1 et
harmful Instrument*, a a.* d|l
o p*ln and no expomn. Hi r*»* 91
cuttii
ness,
money
■i*
US
PH fiwm aittf ponuu, or 0/ rami, wan ui n#,n *
Ntrvout Dwbiilty aid Wtakntsm strlctun s
a( Min AhTMsltawCyscttifalfoUy and «»se»^ Treatment. Hot
wl Mwil, SM—muringImmi by dream«_ar with cu i U ng. b. cplfs or.ounda Kodetentlon frc-w. et-
is. "i'hou-.ndi eared. W. to t red
n.y if net permanently cured. My book rot. % da-
_ .Ins 1mm. by dream* ar wl
uiin.,almpla.aad blotches on the face, resfcre ...
blood to the hoed,paint In the bach, confused Ideas
andtorgsttulaoM, Dathfuineot, a-.relon to aoeloty,
looteCyttal tamos.loo. of manhood,etc., cored for
life. Weesw stow night looms, restore lot* Tlialltj
d.TOlap aaf mature youny or mlddlo aired who art
« *lns this diMoi
arlceetla
woakly aed wreaks and mate them lit for marriage
C.ollll. tfeaSttrrlabl.dl*oare,ln all Its formE
Plllliwi aed stags*, mired for life. Blood
Powontng, M* PI*—see. Direr*, Swelling*. Sore*.
OoaorrhMa, (MM and all form* of ptlvate d1 *•■■.•,
* rOared. Wsgnarentesto refund your
kpormanently oared.
•laddar and Prostaiic
treated and permanent-
aod RUPTWIM ear-
Enlarged vein* la th* eere *
causing nereon* debility, *„i
of thenerroa*system, etc., permsaenUy eerod*
and make them lit for marriage . „
.11 It. fnrm.i J | dTOMy »t the KTSt***
nyaraoaia without pam.
Ildaaf
■ L| n eela Bee book-cured lea Sen
r R I In 9 S IS without twin.
BOA f BIWB TO MEM spoa appMe
DWV a with description ef *bo*adi»«
the effect* and cure, sent sealed in»laln»r.r Wr
Fro M isaoia
lathe elty. Very tnaSraettre. OoeU too nothin s
X*. 7 KarUtU, Car. Vuittu ud Pstchlftt m
DR. KING MEDICAL CO., — Atlanta, ca.
f—— f»T—T-". 0- '- Legally laoorporeted ender the 1aw» of Georgia.)
Bf
; Portable and Stationary
Boilers, SamMSlls
STEAMENQNES
Highest grade Ginning Machinery,
Gasoline Engines, Shingle Mills,
Corn Mills and Pumping Outfits to
be bad in the entire South. Large
stock on hand, best terms, quickest
delivery. It will pay yoa to investi
gate our machinery and (vices.
MALLARY BROS. MACHINERY CO
IT WOULD!?F KEEP.
One Thing the Scotsman Did Not Dare
to Buy In Bulk.
The chairwoman of the board of gov
ernors of a - New York woman's ciub
was discussing the question of the
club’s liquor license.
“It is rather a matter of indifference
to us,” she said, “whether we get a li
cense or not. Women, you know, are
not given to drinking. They are too
careful of their appearance. They de
sire to remain slim and fresh, and
wine, as you know, tends to make us
coarse and stale and fat.
“So if we had a license I think we
should sell little. It would not be with
us as with a farmer I once met in
Scotland.
“Traveling in the Scottish highlands
one summer, I stopped at a farmhouse
for a cup of milk, and the view from
the door was so lovely that I said to
the farmer:
‘“Ah, what a superb place to live
inr
“ ‘Ou, aye,’ he answered in conven-
' ’mal Scotch. ‘It's a’ rieht, but hoo wad
-« like, ma'am, to hae to walk fufteen
^ile ilka time ye wanted a bit glass o’
Whusky?’
“ ‘Oh, well,’ said I, ‘why don’t you
get a demijohn of whisky and keep it
in the house':'
“He shook his head sadly.
“ ‘Whusky,' he said, ‘won’t keep.’
New York Tribuue.
Mr. McNutt’s Speech.
Among the famous men of Wkstmrg
before the war, one of the most promi
nent was a Mr. McNutt. Two qualities
marked him out as an individual type.
The first was his personal cowardice.
Still more individual was his power of
setting aside in his own favor those
prejudices of the public mind which
would have crushed any other man.
He was at one time a candidate for
United States senator. The opposing
candidate was General Quitman. In a
speech McNutt said: “Fellow citizens,
I understand that General Quitman is
aow in the eastern counties reviewing
his militia, and that he says when he
meets me he intends to whip me. Now
I tell him at this faroff distance that if
he wliips me it will be because he can
outrun me, for I have a great horror
for the barbarous practice of personal
violence.”
Such a speech from apy other man
Would have won him the contempt of
his listeners, but it was McNutt, and
people laughed and applauded.—“Recol
lections of Mississippi.”
11.* a>v. ot tub Needle.
YjSen Christ says in his sermon
“thin it Is easier for a camel to pass
through tiie eye of a needle than It is
for a r>:li man to enter the kingdom
»f heaven” he does not mean a sewing
needle, but a hole through which a
camel had to pass through in getting
Into a fortress. It was the custom in
old times, and in parts of Arabia s::;.
Is, for the people of a village to bukd
• fortress against the robbers of ;:.t-
desert. Into which they carried an un
derground passage in a zigzag form
barely large enough for a camel lyiue
down on Its side to work itself through
Into the courtyard, of the fort, and r e
Saviour beautifully compares the strug
gles of the iihi:!::.! v. - '.:::: the r eh mat.
must suffer In order t<> gain paradise.
TP AV ELBR S’ f; XT 11 > R,
The hole was called
needle.”
In the old stone t
cities, in Ireland
eyeholes may i c >
have been pur:
there is cue a hues l p-
Eileach, in Donegal,
eastern eyeh^b*': that
they were :: : ’e by *'
The Irish aumbs .
was erected by h '■
chief 1.300 y-ai s
change.
“the eye
■c-iinen
hi’trt - i..
the
. 1 i; 1 a
“A in
1 tkot cozy lit:;.
the music' room
bright pjoai <<■
Ye,
Ths M
“This is our i d
York woman,
the front roc
room, back o
The ‘deu’ is
your left. Come over and see it.
we have just five rooms in all. The
email hgck ballroom we use us a pack
tog and storage closet. !-n t it cozy
‘Y-e-s." agreed her visitor doubt!' -
ly, “but where do you sieep and i
and all tbatV”
“Oh,” said the New Yorker touidci
ently, “my husband and ! sleep in
‘den* on the oriental couch, and mot;:.-:
sleeps in the music room cn anodes
conch that pulls out at night. We. e.
on that tunny little table in the libra
ry. You've no idea how big it can •
made when the leaves are in. A;
we dress in the bathroom and keep oar
clothes in the packing room. So, yo.>
see, it's all very convenient.”
“What do you do in the kitchen?” In
quired the other laconically.
“Ob, we keep the dogs to there . I
night, and in tile daytime we somt>
times use It—to cook in.”—New York
Press.
3
Indians and Citizenship.
Indians who maintain their tribal re
: Ifitions are not permitted to vote in any
State. They are not citizens of the
United States, but merely “wards of
the nation.” In all the states, we be-
j Ueve, an Indian who has severed his
I tribal relations and become a citizen
1 and a taxpayer has a right to vote on
f an equality with the whites. In the
j flutter of voting the fifteenth amend
, ment to the constitution prohibits the
j states from making any discrimination
bu account of race or color. Our nat
uralization laws, for instance, do not
adxniit Chinamen to naturalization, bu;
the supreme court has decided that a
Chinaman born here is as much a citi
zen as are the descendants of those
who came over with John Smith to
Jamestown or with the pilgrim fathers
to Plymouth rock. And the Indian j
ought to have better rights beio than J
the Chinaman —8L Republic.
A Chinese Chair of Repentance.
The knife chair is an instrument of
torture used to certain Taiping reli
gions ceremonies, which takes the form
of a straight backed armchair furnish
ed with long blades wherever the body
and limbs touch the chair. Ou the back
the knives are placed horizontally, on
the seat, as well as at the base for the
feet to rest upon, vertically, while each
arm Is made of a similar blade, along
the edge of which the sitter's arm
nets. These blades are sharpened with
• whetstone before os.—Wide World
Magazine.
She Well Knew.
Qayley—You haven’t bad occasion to
accuse me of playing poker for two
years. Mrs. Gayley—Three years, my
dear. Gayley—How do you know It’s
three yean? Mn. Gayley—Because
Pve won this draw that tong, and I
■at It the last time I caught you.—
Catholic Standard and Tlmea.
Schedule Callahan Line of
Begini'in : Sunday, Dec, 30 1907,
Wil! operate the fol owing schedule:
Leave:
Bainbridge Sunday, 12 o’k noon
River Landing, 4:30 p. m.
Arrive :
Apalachicola, Monday, 10 a. in.
Leave:
Apalachicola, Monday at noon.
Arrive:
Bainbridge, Tuesday, 4 :30 p. m
Lpu ve:
Bainbridge, Thursday, 12 o’k noon
River Landing, 4:30p m
Arrive :
Apalachicola, Friday 10 a. m.
Leav»:
Apalachicola Friday. 12 'k noon
Arrive :
Bainbridge, Saturday, at 4 p. a-
Conditions of the River and the Weather permitting.
J. W. CALLAHAN, President and General Manager,
BAINBRTDGE, GEORGIA-
Atlantic Ccast Line fiai
vr Notice—These arrivals and departures are given a-< informs!! 1 *
and are not guaranteed Effective May Lti
ARRIVALS
From Montgomery, Dothon, Troy and wf- a ttrn pom
Train No
58
80
57
89
85
1)0 a m-
1,15 p m
2 15 a m
11.35 a m
7.40 p in
Train >0.
I. 40 a m
5.30 a m
115 p in
2 15 a m
II. 35 a m
From Savannah, Wayeross, and Jacksonville.
DEPARTURES.
For Waycrons, Jacksonville and points e*»uth
“ '* Savannah and Eastern poio s
*• “ Savannah, Jackson v ; I and points-ou
“ Troy, Do !nn, Montgomery’and western p^ in
&r Pullman sleeping cars on trains between Bainbridge. ,M -ntgom«rj
Savannah and Jacksonville.
For further information apply to E
Savannah,Ga ; W. J. Craig, P;s-gr. Traffic
C White,Gen. Pas-gr. Agent, Wilmington
Agt, Bainbridge
3 M .North, Hi v. P^;-
c mgr, W'lmi'igtri, N •
n,N C;or tl. M. Dyke-, !■- e
Apalachicola Northern Railroail
Elegant Daily Service Betrees fifier Junction and Apaiat***'
Trams runningon follow schedule (Central Ti r ”‘ > :
Train No. 2-Narthbonn^ ^ ^
5.05 4 ®
Train No, 3—South bon- d.
Leave River Junction 4.20 pm
Dmau
“ Greensboro
u Juniper
M Guest
“ Hosford
“ Evans
u Trump
“ Sumatra
“ Beverly
Arrive Apalachicola
4.45 p m
5’00 p rn
510 p m
5.20 p m
5.45 p m
5.55 p m
6.10 p m
7.05 p m
7.35 p m
8.15 p m
Leave Apalachicola
“ Beverly
<l Sumatra
Trump
J 1 Evan a
“ Hosford
“ Guest
“ Juniper
« Greensboro
« Dolan
Arrive Biver Junction
Connects with all Bail and Boat lines at » lt
the ooat lines at Apalachicola
9 J5 s ®
9 40 a ®
9.50 8®
10.20 8 *
10J08*
10 40 8 »
10.55 8 ®
JlJ0»®
»od
J. N. HOD«W,P« M ^ er
Agent.