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st In Maoon.
• —‘Baptist* in aL
denomination in
ig**ed in active
has stood the best, 25
over One and a Half MI
of ^-erit appeal to you
Is now arranging to invite the conven
tion to that city for the following ses
sion. There will be tnonsatids of peo
ple •belonging to the Baptist denomina
tion here daring the three days of this
convention, and nearly every Baptist
home here will be crowded with dele
gates. Six-Governor W. J. Northern
wbo hag presided at the head of the
Baptists of this organization for the
past ten years, will again be in the
o'»air. Dr. Ragsdale will,act as sec re
tary again, having also been in kis
office ten year*.
The *1-00 contains 2% timesfh* tr*a^
r»FAk«D O.l-T AT THS a
C. DsWITT Sh COAXP*M
A WONDERFUL CREATURE
Bern of a Snowdrift Crossed With a
Little Brown Hare.
Nature has tried many means of sav
ing her own from the" snow death.
Some, like the woodchuck, she puts to
sleep till the snows shall be over.
Others she teaches to store up food
and to hide. So she deals with the'
wood mouse. To still others, as the
moose, she furnishes stilts. The last
moans she employs Is snowshoes.
This, the simplest, most scientific and
best, is the equipment of the snow-
shoe rabbit, the wabasso of Iliawatha,
a wonderful creature born of a snow
drift crossed with a littie brown hare.
umbes Co
Flint River
BAIN BRIDGE, GEORGIA
Manu^r cturers of First Class
Gompiete House Bills
Your Patronage Solicited.
. . rrtvtww • t-H-M-H-H"!"! 1 -!"! 1 i-l-M' lilt IN*
Shorthand
GEORGIA’S LEADING BUSINESS TRAINING SCHOOL
Next to Governor's Mansion.
MASTERED
In Ten Weeks
Tne only business college in tho Southoccupy m
Ita building exclusively.
rjHARTIER;
simple roles. L<
school. We have contraeb? with raHroa i'-
We Secure a Position for Each of C
to 115-00 Per Month.
Write today for Handsomely Xllustru
Coursos by Mail. J. O. BAGWEL L
System consists of thp
alphabet and too
simple roles, beamed in one-half
time required for old systems. Hundreds
holding positions with leading firms ail over
the South after eight to twelve weeks’
courses. Send for the proof. g
BOOKKEEPING taught by "Actual
Business Transactions" from the start.
The most practical and comprehensive
course taught In the South. One who com-
g letes our course can keep any set of books
>r any Une of business.
TELEGRAPHY. This department is In
charge of an operator of twenty years’ prac
tical experience. Railroad wires run into
mploy all of our graduates.
Graduates. <iCooC Board at from Si 2.00
’atatog.
'es,, 196 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Gi.
FRENCH
MARKET
COFFEE
HOW WOULD YOU LIKE
$100 In Gold—$100?
Everyone who sends us in a list of English words made up of
any, or all, of the letters in
“FRENCH MARKET COFFEE*
will receive a present The one sending in the greatest fist
of words will be given One Hundred Dollars in Gold. Hun
dreds of other valuable presents will be given free to contest
ants.
For list of presents and particulars regard*
ing contest, ask your grocer, or write to
CONTEST DEPARTMENT
NEW ORLEANS COFFEE CO., LTD.
■■■HMHaMNEW ORLEANS ■MHBHHM
...CLINTON'S...
MEAT MA FI TC
BLOCK, WATER STREET
I bUTCHER and kt-ep in Cold Storage, constantly, the 1
Best Native Beef—and Hams,Lard j»nd Bacon at Lowest figures *
I do my own work and don’t have log employe*’ bills to <
charge my customers. / i
Brin«?, send or ’phone me your orders and save mouey on
3"our meat acooant.
ML W. Clinton & Son
Phone, 220
e mix.LAN BROS.
GK>IrPHB!RN
COFFEE WOKKS!
CORNEH
friee aid Liberty Street*.
SAVANNAH
Stills, Worms, Caps, Arms and Patch Copper
A {ways on h^nd and Repairing done promptly,
TURPENTINE STILLS OUR
The moose is like a wading bird of
the shore that has stilts and can wade
well for a space, but that soon reaches
the limit beyond which it is no better
off than a land bird. .But the snow-
shoe Is like the swimmer—it skims
over the surface where It will, not car
ing if there be one or a thousand feet
of the element below it In this lies
its strength.
Wabasso has another name, the vary
ing hare, because It varies in color
with the season, and the seasons in all
Its proper country are of two colors,
brown for six months, white for six.
So all summer long, from mid-April
to mid-October, the northern hare is
a little brown rabbit.
Then comes the snowy cold. The
brown coat is quickly shed, a new j
white coat appears, the snowshoe ,
grows fuller, and the little brown hare (
has become a white hare, the snow- i
shoe hare of the woods.—Everybody’s
Magazine.
SQUIRREL WAYS.
Th* Little Animals Are Great Actors
on a Rail Fence.
It is the furry gray squirrel that I
love to watch as he makes his way
along the fence, says a writer in For
est and Stream. He is fond of sitting
on the top rail and surveying his little
worid, but if anything disturbs him it
is worth a long tramp to watch him
as he zigzags back and forth, rollow-
ing the riders toward his home tree.
If not suspicious, however, the gray
skips along from rail to rail, turning
back now and then to jump down and
examine something on lower rails or
on the ground. Often it is a nut that
he thinks he buried in a certain clump
of grass in a fence corner. Frequently
he is mistaken in the exact place, but
he finds it farther on and comes back
to the rider to eat it. Watch him eiose
iy when he finally sees you blocking
his way.
He looks at you <iead turned
sideways, and you wonder that he
shows no surprise and cannot make out
whether he knew you were there all
the time or is only bluffing. Now he
turns back and traverses a few rails,
gets down on the next one and makes
a pretense of searching for something
there, comes back to the rider again
and feigns perfect composure, slips
dowu to the ground while, as he seems
to think, you have been thrown off
your guard and then makes his way
now slowly, uow like a streak, to the
shelter of the woods, just as though
you did not sabe squirrel ways.
his Choice of a Church.
“What church do you belong to ?”
asked a friend once of Senator Matt
Carpenter. ‘*1 don’t belong to any/"'
“Why don’t you join one?” “I don’t
.want to. None exactly suits my
views.” “What one would you join
if you were to feel forced to a
choice Y” “The Catholic, by ali
means.” “And why the Catholic?”
“Because they have a purgatory, and
that’s a motion for a new trial.”—
Kansas City Independent.
His Profession.
The father of a family presented
himself at an emigration office and
asked for tickets.
“How many are you?” inquired
the agent.
“Three—myself, wife and child."
“Your age and profession ?” went
on the clerk.
“I've just turned thirty; profes
sion, carpenter; my wife, a needle
woman.”
“Three of you, you said?” in
quired the man. “What about the
child—sex and age?”
“Boy; seven months.”
“Profession ?”
The father’s eyebrows were raised
so much that they almjist formed
Gothic arches on his forehead.
“His profession, I say ?” repeated
the agent.
The astonished father paused
just a moment longer, wondering
where red tape wonkl stop; then as
if inspired he said:
“Bachelor!”—London Graphic.
Baptists Will Meet In
Maoon, Ga., Nov. 13
the churches of this
the city are now engaged in
preparation fob the ooming or the Geor
gia Baptists’ convention, which
vanes here Nov. 32, S3 and 24.
B. D. Ragsdale, of this city, secretary
of the convention, states that Atlanta
Is n<
ly Animal
you Know that nine-tenths of the lard you buy is made
“any old” part of the hog, according to the public admission
of the leading lard packer? Why, then, under the sun will people
who are otherwise particular about their food continue to eat lard-
soaked dishes? No matter how temptingly they are prepared, if
they contain lard they are sure to cause future trouble.
Cottolene is not only purer than lard, being a vegetable product
containing no hog fat, but it is more economical, more palatable,
more wholesome.
If you care for your health you cannot afford to longer take
chances with lard.
COTTOLENE is Guaranteed ^SJSTZ SK?SE
money in case you are not pleased) after having given Cottolene a. tsar test.
Niauor finlri in Bulk Cottolene is packed in pails with an air-
wever OOiq in PUIH tight top to keep it dean,.fresh and whole
some, and prevent it from catching dust and absorbing disagreeable
odors, such as fish, oil, etc.
Cook Book Free ^^uVeWoKookWS&
edited and compiled by Mrs. Mary J. Lincoln, the famous Food Expert,
and containing nearly 300 valuable recipes.
Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago
“Nature’s Gift from the Sunny South”
mxmm
r ; -v.• mil's*" 'in.,—
RHEUM A TISm
ALMOST AS COMMON IN SUMMER AS IN WINTER.
While the damp, cold, changing weather of
Winter intensifies the pains and other disagreeable
symptoms of Rheumatism, it is by no means a
winter disease exclusively. Through the long
months of Summer its wandering pains and twitch^
ing nerves are felt by those in whose blood the uric
acid, which produces the disease, has accumulated.
Rheumatism is a disease that involves the en
tire system. Its primary cause results from the
failure of the eliminative organs, the Liver, Kid
neys and Bowels, to carry out of the system the
urea, or natural refuse matter. This coming in
contact with the different acids of the body forms
uric add which is taken up and absorbed by the
blood. This add causes fermentation of the blood,
making it sour and unfit for properly nourishing
the body, and as this vital stream goes to every
nook and corner of the body, the poison is distrib
uted to all parts. The nervous system weakens
from lack of rich, pure blood, the skin becomes fe
verish and swollen, the stomach and digestion are
affected, the appetite fails and a general diseased
condition of the entire system is the result.
Not only is Rheumatism the most painful of
all diseases, with its swollen, stiff joints, throbbing
muscles and stinging nerves, but it is a formidable
and dangerous trouble.
Last Summer I had a ssvsrs attaok of Iaflans<
tory Rheumatism In ths knesa, from whioh ! vm
unable to leave my room for several months I
was treated by two doctors and also tried dlA*
ant kinds of liniments and mediolaes vhtae
seemed to relieve me from pain for awhile, bat S
the same time I was not any nearer getting **
One day while reading a paper I saw an adver
tisement of S. S. 8. for Rheumatism. I deoidid
to give it a trial, whioh I did at once. After I had
taken three bottles I fait a great deal better, and
X continued to take it regularly until I was en
tirely cured. I now feel better than I have W
years. CHA8. £. GILDERSLEEVK.
618 82nd Street, Newport News, Va.
If the uric acid is allowed
to remain in the blood, and the disease becomes chronic, chalky deposits form at the joints,
and they are rendered immovable and stiff, and the patient left a helpless cripple for life.
Every day the poison remains in the system the disease gets a firmer hold. The best tun*
to get rid of Rheumatism is in warm weather; because then the blood takes on new life and
the skin is more active and can better assist in the elimination or the poisons. With the
proper remedy to force the; acid out of the blood, and at the same time build up an*
strengten the Liver. Kidneys, Bowels and other organs of the body, Rheumatism can hepifr
manently cured. External applications relieve the pain and temporarily reduce the lnfUo*
matiou, and for this reason are desirable, but they cannot have any effect on the disease.
The blood is poisoned and the blood must be treated before a cure can be effected.
S. S. S., a remedy made from roots, herbs and barks, is the best treatment for Rheums
tism. It goes into the blood and attacks the disease at its head, and by neutralizing the acid
and driving it out, and building up the sour blood so it can supply nourishment ana strength
to every part of the body, it cures Rheumatism permanently. S. S. S. is the only safe care
for the disease; bring purely vegetable, it will not injure the system in the least, a* do
those medicines which contain Potash or some other mineral ingredient S. S. S. tones »f
every part of the body by its fine tonic P ro P ert U
While cleansing the blood of all prisons it builds np
appetite and digestion, soothes the excited nervtt, re
duces all inflammation, relieves pain and completely
cures Rheumatism in every form—Muscular, Inflafflflj*
tory, Articular or Sciatic. If yon are worried with
nagging pains of Rheumatism, do not wait for it to w
come chronic, bat begin the use of 8.8. ft. ,
the blood of every particle of the prison. Write for our book on Rheumiti—, sod r
physicians for any advice yon wish. We make no charge for either.
TUB SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA
The Old Standard
Grove’s Tasteless Chin Tonic
stood the test 25 years. Average annual sales
Million bottles. Does this record
No Cure, No Pay 50c.
BLACK JLOOT LIVER. PILLS.
eat
aJ*