The Bainbridge democrat. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 18??-????, December 31, 1908, Image 2

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CATARRHS AND SYSTEM DISORDERED Cfctarrh is not merely an inflammation of the'tissues of the head and ■t, as the symptoms of ringing noises in the ears, mucous dropping back the throat, continual hawking and spitting, etc., would Beem to indl- | it is a blood disease in which the entire circulation and the greater part of the system are involved. Catarrh is due to the presence of an excess of uric acid in the blood. The Liver, Kidneys and Bowels frequently be- oome torpid and dnll in their action and instead of carrying off the refuse and waste of the body, leave it to sour and form uric acid in the system. This is taken up by the blood and through its circulation distributed to all parts of the system. These impurities in the blood irritate and inflame the different membranes and tissues of the body, and the contracting of a cold will start the secretions and other disgusting and disagreeable Symptoms of Catarrh. Aa the blood goes to all parts of the body the fcarrhal poison affects all parts of the system. The head has a tight, feeling, nose continually stopped up, pains shove the eyes, slight J tomes and goes, the stomach is upset end (die entire system Asoiueied . . . . . _ affected by this disease. It is a waste I had Catarrh for about nftr^A . . J ■aara, and no man could have time to try to tun Catarrh. With been worse, i tried eveiVthinr washes, inhalations, etc. Snch t *ulted d i e then f f)e b fran s° s.°a^ and does not reach the blood, and can, therefore, ■ old see a little improvement <io nothing more than temporarily relieve * u a short b wh!^ was our^d! the discomfort of the trouble. To CMC was six years a»o, and I am Catarrh permanently the blood must be thoroughly purified and the system cleansed j of all poisons, and at the same time strengthened and built up. Nothing equals; S. S. S. for this purpose. It attacks tb rom the nrst bottle, and after akin? it a short while was cured, lis was six years asro, and I am j well today as any man. I think catarrh is a blood disease, and now there is nothing on earth stter for tha blood than S. 8. 8. Tobody thinks more of 8. B. S. ban I do. M. XATBOH, apeer, Mich. PURELY VEGETABLE ev«ji •dk memf sen | disease at its head, goes down to the ver bottom of the trouble and makes a complet ‘ and lasting core. S. S. S. removes everj^ particle or the catarrhal poison from blood, making this vital stream pure, and healthy. Then the inflamed mem branes begfn to heal, the head is loosen and clears, the hawking and spitting cess prery symptom disappears, the constitution Is utiilt up and vigorous hea' ->red. S. S. S. also tones up the stomach and digestion and acts s fine tonic tn the entire system. If you are suffering with Catarrh begin of S. &. S. and write us a statement of your case and our physicians sex.’ you literature about Catarrh, and give you special medical t& with >ut charge. S. 8. S. is for sale at all first class drug stores. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COATLANTA, 64. . •*!« *?•»!* ji ;i Flint River Lumbes Co. BAINBRIDQE, GEORGIA. Manufacturers of First Class Gomplete House Bills i Your Patronage Solicited. ...cifivrdv dj sows... * MEATMARKET HICK’S BLOCK, WATER STREET I BUTCHER and keep in Cold Storage, constantly, the best Native Reef—and Hams,Lard and Bacon at Lowest, figures I do my own work and don’t have big employes’ bills to charge my customers. Brins, send or ’phone me your orders and save" money on vonr meat account. W. W. Clinton & Son i Phone, 220 Me nOLUM BROS. SOUTHERN COBNER a sr~+iJL t i-* >**»!*< t*riee asd Libert] SAVANNAH tattles, Stills, Wofms, Gaps, Arms and Patch Copper Always on hind and Repairing done promptly, TURPENTINE STILLS OUR AND VITALITY 1 The great iron and tonic pill snd restorative for men and women, producer 1 strength and vitality, builds up the system and renews the normal vigor; bringing health and happiness. OOdcsesiuabox. Forsale by all druggists, At-tt [\,hR C.,^: * r-3r.,yj. Ml?V. Qifikfl voinO, 1% Doxe* S5.(X*. l>r. Jim' ■» heouM. -L~., djai Dog Jealousy. There is a strong trait of jealousy In a dog's nature. A story is told of a felrmlugham dog that had been a great pet In the family until the baby came. There was suspicion that he was jeal ous, but he could not be detected in any disrespect to the newcomer. It always happened, however, that when the dog was left with the baby the baby began to cry. No signs of trouble were ever to be seen upon entering the room, and the dog was always found sleeping peacefully before the Are. Finally one day a peep through the keyhole disclosed the canine rubbing his cold wet nose up and down the baby’s back.—Ralph Neville In Outing Magazine. The Way of Scientific Truth. Many prophets and righteous men, many thinkers and Idealists, hare wasted their lives in running after scientific truth. Never run after scien- tiflee truth. Stand where you are, and in a few years scientific truth will run after you. Continue to eat pork, and sooner or iater the doctors will say that pork Is the only food that Is per fectly digestible. Continue to drink port, and sooner or later a man will arise In medical circles who will prove that port is the only certain safeguard ’ "alnst goat. The specialist may have id yon to take your children to the •easide, bat if you are only long enough In packing he will very likely have discovered that sea air Is poison before yon start. The best authorities may have told you, if your chest is weak, to make your bed in your back garden for a year. They may be tell ing yon to grow your tulips in your bedroom the next year.—G. K. Chester ton in Illustrated London News. Cruelty of Mahouts. “Klp*4g and other writers talk about the kindness that the Indian mahouts, or drivers, lavish on their elephants,” said a missionary, “but as a matter of fact no overworked old cart horse, suf fers half. tfjfe cruelty that falls to the Indian elephant’s lot The mahout sits on the elephant's head, a goad, or ancus, in his hand. With this goad he prods the elephant, and, though the prod is gentle, the animal responds with wonderful alacrity. But do you know why? It Is because on the ele phant's forehead, where the goad may reach it handily, an open sore, a dread ful open sore. Is kept. The sore, prod ded, causes the elephant exquisite pain, and he naturally obeys with strange readiness the man who makes him suffer so. Whenever you hear a traveler talk of the mahout’s .affection for his elephant ask the speaker if be ever noticed the running sore on the elephant’s brow.”—Exchange. A Grape Growing 8pectaele. The grape of grapes for the table is grown in Belgium and under glass, says the London Globe. It is In no Arcadian rustic spot that this ideal culture flourishes, but in the wide awake metropolitan suburb of Hoez- Iaert, near Brussels. Here there is a whole region of glass—nothing but glass over a wide vista. The spectacle is one of the shows of the country, for amateurs and sightseers alike. A good many lovers of table fruit whose inter est iu the subject extends no further than the dessert stand will probably be surprised to learn that It is from no nntlve hothouse, but from Hoezlaert that the great fruiterers in London 1‘aris, the Riviera, Vienna, Berlin, St. Petersburg and, mirabile dictu, even New York receive the bulk of their winter supplies. Every Friday hun dreds of chests of choice fruit, admir ably packed, are dispatched to the United States alone. Practical Sympathy. Dr. Edward Everett Hale' called up on the editor of a paper in a small New England town. In the course of conversation the editor told how he was worrying about his wife, how he had sent her to the country for her health, how she was growing worse rather than better, how his heart urg ed him to go to her and how the neces sity of grinding out his editorials day by day was keeping him from her bed side, Dr. Hale returned to his hotel and Called for writing materials. After several hours he returned to the editor and threw on his desk a pile of manu scripts. A “There!” he said' “Go and mo yoor wife, rve scribbled off enough arti cles of contemporaneous human fater- «t to feefi your papqf 1 tor a week.”— Woman’s Home Componlbn. M* ' Off Way* 1*4 - “Harry, here ate ttoee apptod How, suppose I wanted yoU to divide them equally between Jamei, John and yourself. HOW would you do ltT’ • “rd give them one and keep the others.’* , , ’ ' it . “Why, how do yen make thafout?” “Well, you see, It would he one tor those two and one for me too.” His 8tatus. “Uncle Mose, you’re very unsociable.” “Yes, sah, I likes to keep tub tnyse’f, sah.” “Dear me. Uncle Mose, I hope you’re not a misanthrope?” “No, sah. I’se a Baptis’. sah.”—Bal timore American. It Would Be Unoomfortable. Angry - Scot—Look here; Mr. O’Brien, I’ve the verra greatest respect for yer country, but ye mauna forget this: Ye can sit on a rose, and ye can sit on a shamrock, but, O man, ye canna sit on a thistle.--London Sketch. Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry H. with us or we fiu t It not.—Bmr son. Do Yoti Feed Your Family Lard? * The thought of taking into your stomach raw lard—hog fat—’ repellent; then why take it in cooked form? There used to b 1S poor excuse for lard; now there is no excuse at all. L )L a Cottolene is the perfect shortening and frying medium. It is ni healthful and digestible—there is not a trace of hog fat in it It’ basis is choice cotton seed oil refined by a special process a 1 then sterilized and deodorized. The use of Cottolene is the of healthful, digestible cookery. Call up your grocer this minute and order a pail. COTTOLENE is Guaranteed Your grocer is hereby au- ■■ i—in- thorized to refund vour money in case you are not pleased, after having given Cottolene a fair test. Never Sold in Bulk' Cottolene is packed in pails with an air- —1 tight top to keep it clean, fresh and whole some, and prevent it from catching dust and absorbing disagreeable odors, such as fish, oil, etc. Cook Book Free For a 2c stam P to pay postage, we will mail —-■——you our new “PURE FOOD COOK BOOK” 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 mm K3S1 Grove’s Tasteless dull Tonic E itocd the test 25 years. Average Annual Sales over One and a Half MiOioa es. I>oes this record of merit appeal to you ? No Core, No Pay. 50c* Enclosedwhh^vwybottle is a Ten Cent, package of Grove's Black Root. Liver Pills. One of the greatest problems confront ing* Tobacco Growers Is the question of =— PROPER FERTILIZATION — * It is not necessary to turn your tobacco firm into a place for feeding cattle—that is, with proper Up-to-date Fertilizers. Besides, you are in business to grow tobacco at the cheapest outlay, consistent with Quality and Free Burn, as well as Quantity. Why adopt antiquated and expensive methods when you have an opportunity to get results more cheaply and scientifically. We present an Up-the- Minute Fertilizer, which satisfies all requirements, at reduced cost in time, money and labor. In Phospho-Alkali, with Potassium Nitrates Containing no free acid and no chlorine, you have what you have long been looking for. Read what prominent growers say of it, after thorough test. f FLORIDA TOBACCO COMPANY Growers, Packers and Dealers in Florida Shade and Filler Tobacco Warehouses and Plantations: Quincy, Gadsden County, Fla. Vibginia-Cabolina Chemical Co., Savannah, Ga. Gentlemen—We have tested. your Phospho-Alkali tobacco fertilizer for mula, sold us as an experiment last year, as complete fertilizer for grow ing cigar leaf tobacco. We are pleased to state that this experiment was highly satisfactory— 1st. Because it gave a good burn. 2nd. Because it increased the yield 200 to 300 pounds per acre. It did not injure the color of texture in the slightest; in fact, this tobacco grown with your fertilizer gave a more uniform color and texture than that grown vith other fertilizer. If y»n hold this formula to this standard, and sell this fertilizer at ap proximately the same price, we are confident that it will be vastly to the Interest of all tobacco growers to use the same. With kindest regards, we are. Yours .truly, .. Flobida Tobacco Company, D. A. Shave, Present. WEDELBS TOBACCO CO. Quincy, Fla., October 10, 1908. Virginia-C abolin a Comical.Co., Savannah, Ga. ______ ' Gentlemen—We have used this year two (2) tdmrbf your Phospho-AlkAli jpn our tobacco plantation and must jgy that same has. proven, jiptp auz entire satja^actiba. We have given yotir mixture.,a, ^thorough tegjt and cab 1 highjy recommend it /to agyone who^ wishes, to produce a fiii|t-Qldss ,bhrn rf tobacco, tyhich is very necessary:,, j. We wfll place our orders with you for #Hir entire needs for the coming season and trust that you will be for- tanafce in selling a good deal of it in tois community. • Very truly yours.. Wedeles Tobacco Company, , By Max Wedeles. Manager. M. C. WILLIAMS ATrAPULGUS, Ga., October 20. 1908. Vxia-Carolina Chemical Co., Savannah, Ga. Gentlemen—The special shads to bacco formula. Phospho-Alkali. with Potassium Nitrates, purchased from you and used on my crop of shaded cigar leaf tobacco, and on some other shade crops, has proven perfectly sat isfactory. I used those goods in con nection with cotton-seed meal in the proportions of 1,000 pounds of Phos pho-Alkali to 3,000 pounds of cotton seed meal per acre, and think this is the right proportion, as the growth was entirely satisfactory, as well as the burn, texture and all the other prop erties that a first-class, shade-grown crop should have. - I feel sure that you have at last struck the proper formula and one that fully supplies a long-felt want, and, as long as I grow shade tobacco and you hold the goods up to the pres ent standard, I shall give you my business for myself, tenants and cus tomers. As a further advantage that this Phospho-Alkali has over all other formulas that contain potash is that the other goods leach all the plant- food out of the land, while this one (Phospho-Alkali) adds to the proper ties and also produces a tobacco that burns perfectly, which is all the use that potash is to the tobacco. Respectfully, M. C. Williams. J. C. MONTFORD, Tobacco Grower TALLAHA8SEE, FtA., October 22, 1908. Vibginia-Cabolina Chemical Co., , Savannah, Ga, GBNTikMgN—The burn, color,, texture and weight'"came up to all of my ex- pectatlons, and in fact were superior to any crop ! have heretofore .made of shaded tobacco. The.weight .per acre .was fully one-third more than where I used ether fertilizers andf amounted fully to 1,450 pounds per acre. ,_I have nine (9) foot shades and the tobacco grew through the tpp slats after It had been topped. The leaves ran from twelve (12) to twenty-four (24) inches in length. I counted as many as thirty-four (34) leaves to the stalk. I used your Phospho-Alkali on virgin soil, and of course there had never been previous applications of other fertilizers. I planted this to bacco, grown with your goods, fully two weeks after planting the balance of my crop made, with other fertilizers, and it matured at the same time. The growth up to harvesting was very uni- fo Tj2. Yours truly, J. C. Montford. T. M. SCOTT, Tobacco Grower Scotland, Fla., October 19,1908. Vibginia-Carolina Chemical Co., Savannah, Ga. Gentlemen—I am highly satisfied with results. The burn was excellent, the color and texture was uniform and the yield per acre was more than I expected and above the average yield of crops of tobacco I have made in the past. The results had by parties to Thom I sold was equally as favorable as those obtained by me. I feel that I can recommend your formula to grov* ers of shade tobacco. Yours truly, T. M. Scott. Tallahassee Pressed Brick Co> Tallahassee, Fla., October 21, Vibginla-Cabolina Chemical Co., Savannah, Ga. Gentlemen—The results were so ^ tirely satisfactory that' we, with p e ure, add our testimony to the n ous endorsements you are Tteai regarding results obtained by o growers who have used it. The yield, we obtained was over pounds per acre. The burn, wa * ■ cellent and the color and textu re . uniform. We pooled toterests the Leon County Tobacco of this place,' and our tobacco cepted amongst the highest s r * now being-handled by them ^ We will use your exclusive of all other potash id 1 on our next crop. Very truly yours, Tallahassee Pbeswd Bik* . Per L. C. Yeager, Presid*® 1 Leon County Tobacco Comp* 8 * Growers and Pack«r» Tallahassee, FU- October 21, Vibginia-Cabolina Chemical C°.< Savannah, Ga. ^ Gentlemen—The burn, po £ texture of the tobacco grer**^ » above fertilizer was satisfy ,, every way. The heavy s gether with advantages tioned convince us that it fertilizer. Very truly ’ Cft. Leon County Tobac V. F. Balkcom, MANUFACTURED BT Virginia*Carotiha CtierhicatComp an 1 SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.