The Jackson record. (Jackson, Butts County, Ga.) 18??-1907, February 15, 1907, Image 8

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' w> r .* *. HTtlfl EH m RHEUMATISM LUKBIBO, SeilTlCft NEURALGIA and KIDNEY TROUBLEj “l-MOn" Mk'fl fuMmallf. rl.. the bloo. Of the pot.Oß.nß nutter oaO bolOs wßl.k are the direct ceeeee of three diieeeoe. Applied externhiir It hlfimle elmtei lo sient relief (roni polo. while e perteeuent cure le beloar effected bf purlfflee tbe bleed, dleeelrliie the peieoboee eub stance and roteuvlea It freßa tba arateai. DR. 8. D. BLAND Of flreecten, Cos., welfeel “1 li*4 bm a ntT*ror (or a a tin bar of years with I.nmhaco anil Khrumatlem In nT arniM anil lotcff, a fill trltnl.ll tlie reuiedlaa that 1 fniul.l rather from ciedli-al v.orku, and alao ooneulted with anumlw of the hoot pliralclana, but fotinfl nothin.' that on re tbo roll* eiitalnod from ••ft DROPB." 1 filio.ll prrmorlb® It la my praotloe for riim.uti.Moiu tuitl Lmcrtr. dluoaaaa ” FUEE If yon ere nufferlnfr with Kb.umr.tlMß, N> urulgls,, Kidnpy Trouble or any kin dred di.ieane, writn to ub for a trial bottle of' S-DBOP8." au<3 U*t It youratlf. “fl-OROr’S*' rnn be used any leutrth of than without asqulrlus a "drun habit.” as It Is snlirrly freo of opium, oooulne. alcohol, li.ac-ibuwni. cud Ui %t amniar Jncrndlonta. 1 Litri.'Ofllt'' rtoUia, “fa.rtMSl’o"(eOODoia) 1 01. Cii. Par I'-ktlf Ly Krusclata SVJAiiSOH CURE BOBHPABY, Moot. HO. ICO Lake tttroot, Oklutgo. jflp II of liberally rising eur fertili ■ ft Kent, la to pay off a mortgage * ’l ontheoldiarm Keailthcfol | I lowing from MoSsrs. W harry Ift k Son,owners of the Magnolia 1 H Fruit Farm, Durant. Mis*.: llt "Wanuule SUU) from one acre Jjr strawberries, on which your IS fortlllaera wore used. Eight H&H $$ year* ago we bough t this j>lhco H at S2O per acre. It was then MtV H considered to have l*>en worn 1 out twenty years before, but by liberally tiling Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer* under pea* and velvet bean*. Vt> can now grow alaiost any thing, and havo been offered $-60 per acre for the place. We experimented with a groat many brand* of fertilizer*, but find the highest per- cent, cheaper.” Now don’t you think Virglnia-Carolina Fertilisers would enable you to pay off a mortgage if you had one? JL / Well, don’t use any other. Virglnta-Ccrolioa Chemical Richmond. Va. JMi, Pi Norfolk. Va. Durham, N. 0. Charleston, 8. C. Baltimore. Nil. Sffo; Atlanta, (Ja, KXb Savannah, (la. Iffi Montgomery, Ala. MR Memphis, Tenn. till Shreveport, La. flli Th A Comparison. A New York .lawyer was cross (questioning a negro witness in one iof the justice courts and was get ting along fairly well until he ask ed the witness what his occupation f :was. “l’s a carpenter, sail.” “What kind of a carpenter?” “They calls xno a jackleg carpenter, sail." I ‘‘What is a jackleg carpenter?” “He is a carpenter who is not a first class carpenter, sail.” “Well, ex f ©lain fully what you understand a f jjackleg carpenter to be.” insisted the lawyer. “Boss, I declare 1 dun no how to ’splain any mo’ ’cept to / Bay hit am jes the same diffunce I f twixt you and er first class lawyer.” Change of Name. On and after 22nd day of February 1907 the legal advertisraents will be published in “The Jacksonian - ’ a newspaper that will be published in Jackson Butts County Qa. W. W. Wilson. Sheriff B.C. On Feb. 22nd 1907 the Damejof this paper will be changed frem the Jack fon Record to that of The Jacksonian h dm 1 roM iff n.r flirt Th Delioete Balar.oe of the Gigantic Bag of Gas. It is while discharging ballast to enter the higher altitudes that you get your first idea of the hair trig ger balance of the giant contriv ance keeping you afloat. Your pi lot takes a small wooden scoop, no bareex ihum test •Jidiuary tissd soup ladle, digs into on* of the sand bags n£ Madrtces a Atgie “aLevalfuT’ overboard. TTp darts your balloon -106, *O6, 300 feet. Aa ordinary tiaad b#ttk* f beer HpilLed over board lightens the balloon enough to ond it up £SO foot, and if you happen to be over o vacant field whwre ywn oua drop The bottle your ecif without risk of killing any one the vekmee of this weight will send you up on oilier 800 feet. deli cately poised it your balloon onco it lyis siruok ite balance that you could push it up or pull it down from 300 to 400 feet with strength equal to that, of your little finger. When a mere cloud passes be tween you and the sun, causing in stant contraction of the gas in the balloon, the envelope becomes bag gy and flaccid at once, and you be gin to fall, sometimes at tbe rate of a thousand feet a minute, although you have no warning of this other than the statoseope and no sensa tion except the thrill as you see th“ alarming rapidity with which the earth comes nearer to you. Three or four scoopfuls of sand may be necessary to sacrifice before you again strike your balance, and the next moment the sun darts from behind the eloud, warms the bal loon, and the envelope tautens al most with a bang, and you go kit ing upward under your lightened load until you are obliged to open the escape valve to let out gas to prevent going up above your orig inal level. Then it is that you be gin to understand why the bugbear of the aeronaut is alternate cloud and sunshine, why he prefers sail ing during the night and why, if he does sail throughout the day, he mounts high above the clouds in continuous sunshine, where the vol ume of gas in the balloon remains constant. —A. W. ltolker in Ameri can Magazine. Monotonous Seertery. Mrs. Grime*, the landlady, was trying to find ent the Mature of her new hoarder’s occupation. First she asked him if he was in business. ITe told her that he was not. Then khe suggested that possibly he was a salesman. “No, I’m not a salesman exactly.” "Traveling man ?” “Yes, I am a aort of traveling man.” “Make regular trip#, I suppose.” “Very regular.” “Well, I should think you’d like that. There’s some variety about it.” “There isn’t much variety about my trips. They're always through the same territory.” “That gets kind o’ tiresome, does it?” “Very.” “Still, if business is good and you make plenty of sales” — “But I don’t make any sales. The fact is, Mrs. Grimes. I am a cou- SPENCER MONUMENT TO BE EREGTEO IN ATLANTA. A large number of resolutions un animously adopted by the employes in various departments expressing a desire to erect a suitable monument to the memory of the late Samue Spencer, President cf the Southern Ry. Cos. who lost h*s life in an acci ient Nov. ”9, 1906, have uoet with the uearty approval of the executive ifhcers. It baa been decided to erect this monument on the plaza in front of the Terminal Station in Atlanta, be cause Mr. Spencer was a native Georgian. This particular site in front of the Terminal Station was chosen because this station itself is a monument of Air. Spencer’s own energy and love for this state, while what is to be erected is a testimonial of the employs klov* and esteem for him whose kindness of heart ever led him to treat with the same conaider ation hta humblest employs and his highest offlser. POPULAR OANCES. Ths Origin or the Significance of Their Names. The names of popular dances have in most cases a very interest ing origin or signification. The position taken up by tbe dancers gave the name to the quadrille, which is literal French lor “a little nquaie,” while country dance has no connection with rustic ■rrmuMtics, but is simply a corrup tion of the French centre danse, which has reference to the position of the couples opposite to each oth er during the dance. The lancers derived its name from the fact that this variation of the quadrille was originally impro vised by a company of lancers for thoir own amusement while seated in their saddles. The polka is a Polish dance, and its name eomo6 from the Bohemia* word polka, meaning half, and re fers to the half step which ooour# in this lively measure, of which the more graceful schottish is a varia tion, both names, like that of the national dance of Poland—the ma zourka —being native terms. The short steps peculiar to the old time favorite, the minuet, gave the dance its name, the Latin for “small” being minutus. The waltz, again, owes its name to its characteristic movement, the Germaii waltzen, meaning to re volve, expressing the circling mo tion of the dancers. The Kogcr de Coverley is named after its originator, while the less familiar dance known as the taran tella is so called because its vigor ous movements were supposed to be a certain antidote to the poison of a noxious spider at Taranto, in Italy, where the dance is highly popular. The evolutions of the dancer suf ficiently explain the term reel. Jig is from the French gigue, and breakdown is a term from across the Atlantic and refers to the final rout before the breakup of a free and easy dancing party. —London Telegraph. A Good Memory, Of the late genial and kindly hearted Henry Burch it is told that a good many years ago, while he held the position of janitor of Trin ity Methodist Episcopal church, the minister one summer Sunday morn ing delivered a sermon which, it appears, had been given by him once before, perhaps two or three years previous. On the Sunday in question and during the progress of the sermon a violent thunderstorm came up, which created some little nervous ness among the congregation. After the services were over and as the minister was about to leave the building lie met the janitor, “Henry,” said he, “that was a pretty severe storm while I was preaching this morning.” “Yes, Mr. replied Henry, “and the singular tiling about it is that there was a thundrestorm the last time you preached that ser mon.”—Oil City Blizzard. Festival of the Dolls. A curious custom of the Japanese is that of the observance of a cer tain day in April of each year called dolls’ day, or the festival of the dolls. On this day all the girls and wom en array tliemseltes in gaudy attire, and the mother of each household adorns the family room in gay col ors. Then the little girls dress all their dolls, old and new, in their best Sunday clothes and prop them up about the walls. In the after noon a great feast is prepared, os tensibly for thq benefit of the dolls, though the repast is actually con sumed by the grown folks in the evening. Japan is the only country that lias such a festivity. A Lawyer’s Retort. A lawyer in Washington was tell ing some colleagues of neat retorts he had heard in court when he was reminded of the interchange of compliments between a western judge and a sharp tongued attorney from Chicago. The judge, a quick tempered man, had had several “run ins” with counsel when sud denly he observed, “I can teach you law, Mr. Perkins, but I cannot teach you manners.” “That is true, your lionor,” retorted the Chicago law yer. • iTiic RtiuOiii and mim 1 Vbdi $1.25 CASTORIA ■ w i t in The Kind You Eave Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of' and has been made under his per /'T* , 6011 ft f supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and •* Just-as-good’* are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children— Experience against. Experiment. What is CASTORIA Casti rta is a- harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and W ind Colic. It relieves Teethiug Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panaccai—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Tto Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY. 77 MURRAY ITREET, NEW YORK CITY. SOUTHERN RAILWAY OFFERS UNEXCELLED SERVICE NORTH, SOUTH, EAST and WEST. For rates, routes and schedules or any other- in formation, address, 0. R. PETTIT, Trav, Pass. Agent, Macon Ga> The RECORD for Job Printing, and Jldwrtising GOOD WORK GOOD PRICES 1 Plant Wood’s I Garden Seeds FOR SUPERIOR VEGE TABLES & FLOWERS. Twenty-eight years experience —our own seed farms, trial grounds—and large warehouse capacity give us an equipment that is unsurpassed anywhere for supplying the best seeds obtainable. Our trade in seeds 3 both for the I J Garden arid Farm { is one of the largest in this country. We are headquarters for Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed # Oats, Seed Potatoes, Cow Peas, Soja Beans and. other Farm Seeds. Wood’s Descriptive Catalog gives fuller and more complete Infor mation about both Garden and Farm k Seed* than any other ilmilar publica \ tion Issued in this country. Mailed 1 free on request. Write for ii j T. W.Wotf & Sen, Sedsaen, 7 RICHMOND, . VA. I Pliable, Durable, ! 3 Shapely, I Comfortable j§ No. #l4O, Sold Everywhere, Price, L $ 2 - 00 j