Weekly times enterprise and South Georgia progress. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1905-????, October 27, 1905, Image 3

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times enterprise, thomasviwje. LIEUTENANT BOWMAN IN FORTY-EIGHT NOUNS PE-«0«INED Hi; Gold Affected Head and Throat —Attack Was Severe. Choe. W. Bowman, 1st Lieut, and Adjt. 4th M. S. M. Cuv. Vola., writea from Lanham, Md., as follows: ‘‘Though somewhat averse to patent med icines. and still more averse to becoming a professional affidavit man. it seems only a plain duty in the present Instance to adil my experience to the columns already written concerning the curative powers of Peruna. U I ha vc been pa rttcularly bene ft fed by If* uho for cold# In the head and throat, I have been able to fatly cure myaelf of u moat severe attack in fort y-elqht hours by its useacconl iny to directions. 1 use itas a preventive whenever threatened with an attack. “Members of my family also use it for like ailments. We are recommending it to our friends.”—C. W. Bowman. Pe-rn-na Contains No Narcotics. One reason why Peruna has found per manent use in so many homes is that it contains no narcotic o: ary kind. It can be used any length of time without acquir ing a drug habit. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for free medical advice. All correspondence held strictly confidential. Ught-hued Shoes. Even the shoes ot light hues hare .been taken under consideration. It looks like a piece of bees' wax at brown eoap, and contains a. little ot everything, even rubber. Best ot all, It Isn't "mem." One simply rubs It over the tolled places until they are clean. This will also clean snede kid, though there Is a new cream that le somewhat better for suede. / Though both these cleaners aet well on whits buckskin, nothing It better than the whitewash-like prep aration with which ell are familiar. This, however. Is a whitewash rath* er than a cleaner, and so, at Inter vals, the shoes should be washed in soapsuds. After being quickly dried the ‘‘whitewash" Is applied. It Is equally good tor While linen ahoca. The gayer the shoe the worse It looks uoleis It be "spiok and span." He Was Very Much Alive. When visiting one ot the primary schools some yean ago, the day be fore Memorial Day, or Decoration Day, as It was then more generally called, 1, as usual, as a member of the School Board, addressed the pu pils. When closing I sail): Well, children, you have a holiday to-morrow. What day Is ItT” Decoration Day!" from all In uni son. What do you do on Decoration Day?" "Decorate the solaiera’ graves,” said all together again. '•Why do you decorate their graves any more than others?" This was a sticker, but Anally one little fellow held up his hand. “Well, sir, why Is it?” . "Because they are dead and wo ain't."—Boston Herald. The Beet Sermon. Dr. Truman J. Backus, president of Packer Institute, Brooklyn, recently said In d public address that the beat sermon he had ever heard was preaohed to him by an old colored mu, the former body-servant of Gov ernor Bull, of South Carolina. Doctor Backus was a visitor to Charleaton. and during a drive about the city with the Confederate soldier who Bred the Bret shot at Fort Sumter be met this aged negro. The Confederate asked him how he was getting on. "Meste.* said the old man, cheer- fully. "I’m )ust making the beat out of the worst."—Ram's Horn. It costs only three francs to cremate a human bcinc in France. PITS no rmunnaUv cured. I>'ortt*ornon:oii«i nessaftcrilr.it day’snse o' Dr. Kline’s flreat Kerrolto3toror,->atrlalbottlo andtroattsofroo Dr. It. I.HtlJl, Ltd.,931 Arch St.. Phtll., Pi. CAPT. GRAHAM’S CURE TWO VIEWS.. "Tea, he used to be In the news paper (business, but hefe studying for the ministry now.. He says he deolded that he couldn't be a reporter and save hia eoul.” “Indcedf I believe hit pld city edi tor put It differently. He saya he ! couldn't be a reporter to aave his soul."—Philadelphia Press. Sores on Paco nnit llack—Tried Many Doctors Without Snccpss— alvei Thank* to Cutlcura. Captain W. S. Graham, 1321 Eoff 8t., Wheeling, W. Va., writing under date of June 14, '04, Bays: “I am eo nrntetul 1 want to thank God that a friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment to roe. 1 Muttered for a long time with sores on my face end back, borne doctor* said I had blood poiaon, and others that I had bar bers’ itch. None of them did me any good, but they all took my money. My friend* tell me my akin now looks as clear as a baby’s, and I tell them all that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment did it.” MOTHERHO Actual Sterility in Women Is Very Raf£—He! Mothers and Children Make Happy Heme Mr*. Winslow's Soothln^Bymp for children teethlnc,soften tho Turns, reduce* inflamma tion,allays pain,cures wind colic,25c.abottlo. required to mnkc J am sure Plao’s Corn for Consumption sAved my IIfo three years ago.—-Mrs. Thoiiah Iton- KRTs, Mnplo St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900 cvinuary i.ouon. jxever /'ana. noia ov nn druggists, $1. Mail qrdera promptly filled by Dr. E. Detchon. Crawfordsville, Ind. So much of every staple crop la now controlled for price that those who hold will got their priced Tho world can not do without the con trolled part. Farmers be encouraged. •Time Flies. _ A small boy who was waiting with his mother In a twelve-story office building on Chestnut street tbe other dny, watched with fascination an indl- entor which showed, by a pointing hand on a dial, where the mounting car was. “Mamma,” ho sold, “now I know why everybody here hurries so. Just look how fast that clock goes!”— Philadelphia Record. Catarrh Ouro. V. J. Chxxxy 4 Co., Toledo, O. We, tbe undersigned, have known F.J, C heney for tbe last It years, and believelilm perfectly honorable in all business transac tion* and financially able to carry out any obligations mode by their firm. Wist 4 Tauax, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O, Waldixo, Kxxxan 4 Martin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Carols takea Internally, aet- Take 1 Schiller's Father's Wish. Apropos of the Friedrich Schiller centenary It is Interesting to recall that whendhe news of the birth of tho poet reached Ids father, the latter be sought '6dd to bestow upon the hoy “those gifts of mind and soul to which he himself, through lack of education, had never attained.” Malsby & Co. 41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, 6a. Portable ami Stationary Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line Carried in stock for IM MEDIA TE DELI VKll Y. Best Machinery, Lowest Prlcea and Brat Terms Write u* lor catalogue, prices, etc., before buying. THE DAI tltakir lurtkat.br a«Ujn.Mail>rapey QUICK RESULTS. W. J. Bill, of Concord, Justice ot tho Peace, eay«: “Doan's Kidney Pills proved a very efficient remedy In my case. I used them for disor dered kidneys and backache, from which I had experienced a great deal of trouble and pain. Tho kid ney secretions wero very Irrcgnlsr, dark colored and full of sediment. Tho Pills cleared It all up and I have not bad an acho In my hack elnce taking tbe last dose. My health generally is improved a great’ deal.” Foater-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For stile by all-dealers, price 50 cent! per box. Once a week every pipe an a drain In the house ehoud be flushed with copperas solution to remove all odon tnd sediment. y^EkBMg R IRESIDE Fixing Railroad Rates. Making railroad rate* Is tike playing a gam. of cheek.rs or cheu. Com munities to be benefited, producers, mannfaetnrcrs or shippers to be aided represent tbe pieces nsed. Every possi ble move Is studied for It. effect on the general rc.nlt by .killed traffic mana gers. A false move In the making of freight rate, may mean the rain of a city, of a great .manufacturing Interest, of an agrlcnltnral community. Rail roads strive to build up all these so that each may have an equal chance In the sharp competition of business. So sensitive to this rivalry are the rail roads that In order to build up business along their lines'they frequently allow' the shipper to pracUcally dictate rates. Rate making has been a matter of de velopment; of mutual concessions for 1 mutual benefit. That .Is why tbe rail roads of the United States have volun- ! tartly made freight rates eo much lower | la this country than they are on tho ! government-owned and operated rail- I ways of Europe and Australis that they are now tbe lowest transportation I rates In the world. The t-lttl. Orpbi.il Home. Mrs. Sego, one of the trustees of the New Orleans Orphan Homo, gives Dr. Diggers’ Huckleberry Cordial for the relief of all bowel troublos. She never suffers hersolf to be without it. Sold by all Druggists, 25 and 50o bottle. The Southern .States arc producing ball ihe lumber cut in Americs. A Frame House 100 Years Old. A frame house cun be kept in good order for a hundred years, if painted with tbo M. l’aint mixed with three gallons linseed oil will paint a house. W. H. ilsrr, Charleston. W. Va., writea: . "Painted Frankcnburg Block with L. & hi.: stands out as though varnished." VV'enrs and covers like gold. Sold everywhere nnd by Longman & Martinez, New York. Paint Makers lor Fifty Years. FRICK TO ODB READERS. Barber 8hop and Rules. R was at .. barber shop yesterday | afternoon, on First avenue, that It i happened. "Neif!” shouted the barber, who | had Juet dealt with a customer. Two j persons at once sprang from the chairs where they had been waiting patiently and approached the knight of tho razor each looking ferociously and Inquiringly at the other. One of them was an elderly personage, evi dently from tho country, tho other ai young sprig ot city breed, whose down had Just begun to Indicate the slow and uncertain approach of beard. “Which ot you Is next?” asked the barber. “I am,” said tbe young man. "No, you are not,” protested the other, “and, as I am the oldest,- I claim first chance. Besldeo, I am In a groat hurry." “Ah! I see you aro from the coun- try and. of course, do not understand the rules of society governing such cases as this." said the youth. "What la tbo rule?" "Simply this. Beauty goes before age. So I will take the chair. See?” "Ob, well; that's right. Mr. Bar ber shave him first He has got the best of me by that rulo of his, and come to think of It, he's right accord ing to the rule where I come from." “Indeed? What la the rule whero you come from, old chap?” asked tho young fellow, os he fixed himself comfortably In the barber's chair. "Well, young man. the rule down my way Is taat we always keep the pigs ahead of us."—Seattle Post In telligencer. Botanic Blood Balm for the Blood. If you suffer from uloors, oczoraa, scrofula, blood poison, cancer, eating sores, itching skin, pimples, boils, hope pains, BtrclllngH, rheumatism, catarrh, or any blood or skin disoase, we advise you to iako Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B). Especially recommended for old, obstinate, deep-seated oases, cures where all else fails, heals every sore, makes tho blood pure and riob, gives the skin the rich glow of health. Druggists, $1 per largo bottle, 8 bottles $9.00, 6 bottles $5.00, Compulsory cleanliness prevails in the schools of Copenhagen. Mon j women long for a child to bleat their homes, but because of some de bility or displacement of the female organs they are barren: Preparation for healthy maternity ia accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham’s menta, ulceration and inflammat! A woman who la in good physical condition transmits to her children the blessings of a good constitution. Ia not that an incentive to prepare for a healthy maternity ? If expectant mothers would fortify themselves with Lydia E. Pinkhanrs Vegetable Compound, which for thirty years has sustained thousands of women in this condition, there would be a great decrease in miscarriages, in suffering, and in disappointment! at birth. The following letters to Mrs. Pink- ham demonstrate the power of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in such cases. Mrs. L. C. Glover, Vice-President of Milwaukee Business Woman’s Associa tion, of 614 Grove Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes: Dear Mrs. Pfak&am:— “ I was married for several years and no children blessed our home. The doctor said I had a complication of female troubles and I coulrl not have any children unless I could be cured. For months I took his medicines, trying in vain for a cure, but at last my hus band became disgusted and suggested that I ■any Women Save Bon Benefited by try Lydia E. Ptekh.m’. Vegetable pound; this I did, nnd I improved itr* 4 With, and in less than two year* »I child cams to bless our tome. Vow we I something to live for, and nil tbe aso due to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable < pound.” Mi the The Norman, Milwaukee, Wii., i Dear Mrs. Pinkhami— “ I was married for five years l birth to two premature children. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound wi mended to me, and I am so glad I took il it changed me from a weak, nervous vr to a strong, happy and healthy one i •even months. Within two years a 1 little girl was born, which is the pride I oy of our household. Every day I I jydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Cotnpoum tbe light, health and happiness it brought our home.” If sfiy woman thinks ahe is i or has doii a child to a mature birth let her v to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., whd advice is free to all expectant would-be mother!. She has hel] thousands of women through this r Sous period. Women suffering with irregular painful menstruation leucorrhoea, d placement ulceration or indammatil of the womb, that bearing down fe ingor ovarian trouble; backache, bio ing or nervoua prostration, should i member that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg table Compound holds the record 1 the greatest number of actual cud of woman’s ills, and aooept no subsp tute. ire. PMJw’fi Advice, ^*d cyo 00.... ammsmi in Atlanta. Georgia, VI/ I w ■ a Southern Buggy , , for Southern trade, has a fine Leather Quarter Top, has Genuine Leather. Spring Bottom Cushion, and Leather Back, is elegantly rsinted, and fully Guaranteed. —2, Yor this fine Collar and Hame Sr* • harness, sold with every EAGLE BUGGY, regular retail price Catalog and full description sent on request. Golden Eagle Buggy Co. 168-160 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, Qs. Shoes which meet every demand mado upon them for wear and style last longer and look better. ^ . “always just correct” ItMERMND SHOES] JUST THE KIND YOU WANT Your dealer will see that you are supplied with these shoes if you Insist. Eoery dealer ought to glue you the best. See that you get these. For business or dress esk for "SIR KNIOHT" r $fcrthnm£r-S>niarte ffln/ LARGEST FINE SHOE EXCLUSIVISTS ST. LOUIS, U. 8. A. faborthand and Tele- Matching Shades to Dodg. Them. Before trying to mntch the asmpl 1 . of .Ilk tbo cleric asked: "Is this a piece of something you want, or something you don’t want?" 'Something I want, of course," re plied the customer, with asperity. You don’t suppose, do you, that I would go to all this trouble for a thing I can't use?” 'Borne folk do,” said the clerk. ‘Tve met a number of them. The first woman I ever saw with that kind of bee In her bonnet bad s square Inch of blue silk that she wanted me to match. The scrap of silk was so email that It was hard to make com parisons, but after hauling down half tho blue bolts on tbe shelves and run ning to tbe door several times to test the color In broad daylight, I found the exact shade. "’Hour many yards do you want, msdame?’ I Asked. '“Oh," said the woman, 'I don’t want any. Almost any other piece will do.' That particular shade Is very unbecoming. I Just wanted to make sure that'I don’t get It, that’s all.’ ’’ The customer laughed. "What did you say?” she asked. 'Td rather not tell,” said the clerk. "Anyhow, since then I have been cau tions. Before matching a sample now I Inquire os politely as possible Into, s cummer's Intentions. If It’s a case of ‘Don’t want’ I don’t hurt myaelf matching tbe shade."—New York Pifess. Truths that Strike Home Tour grocer i» honest and—if he care* to do so—can tell you that he knows very little about tho bulk coffee ha sells you. How can he know, where it originally came from, how it was blended—or With What —or when roasted? If you buy your coffeo loose by the pound, how can you okpoct purity and nnifonp quality t LION COFFEE, the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES, la ol necessity uniform in quality, strength and flavor. For OVE* A QUARTER OF A CENTURY, UON COFFEE millions ol homes. UON COFFEE »< el our lactorles. and until opened In your borne, hex no cbnnec ol being adul terated, oe ol cowing In contact rvttb dad, dirt, genu, or unclean bands. you get one full _ _ itting the genuine. —l every package.) (Sava the Lion-heeds for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE W00L80N SPIOE 00., Toledo, Ohio. Tn each package of LION COFFER you pound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting (Lion head on every package.) WINCHESTER "NUBLACK" BLACK POWDER 8HELL8 The “'Nublaclc” is a grand good shell. It is’ good in construction, primed with a quick and sure primer, and carefully loaded with the beat brand* of powder and shot. It is a favorite among huntera and other users of black powder shells on account of. its uniform shooting, evenness of pattern and strength to- withstand reloading. ALL DEALER8 SELL THEM New Yoek-Ol" Newell Street, nr L <SottthBmiSt. | i BAD BREATH S i}jy.yyjiaa:^gagrc£ w? sa: 3 : Beat for The Dowels s w. or ineooweis ^ CANDY CATHARTIC Do Hood. ""llMl 1- ’ “* “ *** 8ter!Ing Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 59S ANNUAL SALE, TEN KiLLlON BOXES POSSIBLY. Mbs Ackerman—‘Mr. Nuptal, .the widower, has been married twelv* fliya. Mill Hopeeler—Why don’t he mar-: ry again? Ml,* Aikermtn—Probably he le anp- entlUa'u*.—Woman's Boms Co.mpa» UfATETTE STOCK FUR, J. CROUCH a SON, jOQL Great German Coach-Stallions CH 4ftOW.NaabvlUe.Taqp. T| CENTS BUYS PACKAGE ECONOMY BLUE Makes Full Quart Best Wash Bluing Co.. Lcoleville.XS. NEEDLES. SHUTTLES, REPAIRS. t ALL SEWING MA- ES. SlKndArd Goode Only, Free Cal&lege lo Dernier*. BLELOCK MFG. CO.. 513 Locust su, 8T. Lduis. MO. (At20-'05) Thompson's Eye Water