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CURES ALL SKIN TROUBLES.
BaJphur the Accepted Remedy for a
Hundred Yeam.
Sulphur ia one of the (treateet reroedie*
■ature ever gave to man. Kvery physician
kaowa it cure* akin and blood troubles.
Hancock’s Liquid Hulphur enables you to
(•t the full benefit in most convenient
iarrn. Don’t take sulphur “tablets” or
Wafers,” or powdered sulphur in molasses.
Hancock's Liquid Sulphnr is pleasant to
lake and perfect in its action. Druggists
Mil it.
A well known citir.cn of Dam'ille, Pa.,
Writes: "I have had an aggravated caae of
Beaama for over twenty five years. I have
aaed eeven 50 cent bottles of the Liquid,
ttad one jar of your Hancock’s Liquid Sul
akar Ointment, and now I feel as though
I had a brand new pair of handa. It haa
•■red me and I am certain it will cure any
if they peraiat in using Hancock’s
liquid Sulphur according to directions.
“tiUTLBB EdOAB."
THE BHORT DISTANCE CHAMPION
Knlcker—Why don’t you got a tour
tag car?
Bocker —What’s the use? I always
■mash in two blockß anyhow.—New
York Sun.
Beware of Ointments For Catarrh
That Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense ol
tell an<l completely derange the whole sye
n when entennp it through the mucous
aarfnees. Burh articles should never be used
•acept on prescriptions from reputnble phy
aioians, as the damage they will do is ten told
to the good yon can (xissilily derive from
taein. Hall’s (Viarili Cure, manufactured
ky F. .) Cheney &, Cos , Toledo 0., contains
M mercury, and is taken internally, acting
wrertly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
tthesystem. In buying Unit's Ontnrrh Cure
sure you get the genuine. It is taken in
rnally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by K.
Cheney A Cos. Testimonials free.
Bold by Druggista; price, 75c. per bottle.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
When We Are Civilized:
Public servants will devote more
time to duty and less to politics.
Big criminals will be pursued as ro
lantloHSly as little criminals.
There will be truth In trade.
There win be more art and Jobs
Commercialism.
There will be fewer moral cowards.
There will be greater effort to obey
knd less effort to evade laws.
Wealth will be less arrogant
There will be no favored classes.
Pain wifi make fewer tyrants.
Men will be as anxious to pay debts
U to polled them.
Advantage will not bo taken of Ig
norance.
Man will not fear the truth.
Hypocrisy will be a lost art.
Manhood will tako precedence over
position.
Men will not submit to wrongs to
avoid effort and trouble.
There will be as much patriotism
In time of peace as in time of war.—
B. C. P. In Life.
Russian Children’s New Games.
I The influence of the patriotic stand
Which the school children of German
(Poland have made against their op
pressors has spread into Russian Po
land. In Warsaw the youngsters are
playing anew game called "Demon-
Itrators,” in which they divide them-
Waives into two camps—-" Cossacks"
and "Patriots" or "Demonstrators."
!Th latter form procession and ad
vance singing Polish melodies: where
upon they are immediately charged by
the “Oossacks," and after a scuffle
are driven off, leaving their "dead”
and "wounded" on the ground. In St.
Petersburg the school children have
ftarted a game of
London Chronicle.
' A FRIENDLY GROCER
Dropped a Valuable Hint about Coffer.
"For about eight years,” writes a
Mich, woman, ‘‘l suffered from nerv
ousness—part of the time down in
feed with nervous pivstration.
"Sometimes I wofful get numb and
It would bo almost impossible for mo
to speak for a spell. At others, I
.would have severe bilious attacks,
and my heart would iluttcr painfully
When I would walk fast or sweep.
k "I bavd taken enough medicine to
•tart a small drug store, without any
benefit. One evening our grocer was
asking Husband how 1 was and ho
argod that 1 quit coffee and use Pos
tam. so he brought home a pkg. and
I made it according to directions and
We were both delighted with it.
"So we quit coffee altogether and
ased only Postum. 1 began to get
better in a month's time and look like
another person, the color came back
to my cheeks, 1 began to sleep well,
■ly appetite was good and I com
menced to take on flesh and become
interested in everything about the
bouse.
"Finally I was able to do all my
•wn work without the least slgu of
Sjr old trouble. lam so thankful foi
ie little book, ‘The Road to Well-
Tille.’ It has done me so much good.
I haven't taken medicine of any kind
far six months and don't need any.
"A friend of ours who did not like
Dostum as she made it, liked mine,
and when she learned to boil it long
anough, ber’s was as good as mine.
It’s easy it you follow directions.”
Name given by Postum Company,
Mattie Creek, Mich. Read the little
book. "The Road to Wellville,” in
flfcga. "There's a reason.”
RURAL ROUTES
IN JEOPARDY
Country People Must Wake Up
and Show More Interest.
A WARNING IS ISSUED
Departmant Says Rules of the Service
Must be Observed or It Will Be Either
Reduced or Discontinued.
A Washington special says: The de
cision of the Fourth Assistant Post
master General DeGraw concerning
the discontinuance of rural mall
routes, where they are supported
by those living along those routes,
is a matter of the utmost importance
to every R. F. D. route, especially
in the southern stares.
Investigation shows that
routes are not being patronized in
the south anything like as liberally as
north of the Ohio river.
In order to ascertain .the cause of
the trouble and to see just to what
extent Jt. F. D. routes generally are
being patronized, the postoffice de
partment during the past few months
Instituted a careful inquiry through
out the country. Special inspectors
huve been instructed to make inves
tigation, and these reports recently
submitted account for the department
orders discontinuing quite a number
of rural routes—more in the south
than anywhere else.
Fourth Assistant Postmaster Gen
eral DeGraw has rendered a decision
Insisting upon adherence to the reg
ulations requiring that boxes on rural
mail routes should be erected by the
roadside so that carriers can get easy
access to them without dismounting
from their vehicles. Not only are
boxes to be erected by those who ex
pect to patronize these routes, but
wheer it is ascertained that residents
living along a route are not patroniz
ing the mail service to an extent that
will justify a continuance of the route,
orders will be issued abolishing the
route, leaving the people to get their
mail the best they can by sending to
the nearest posofflee.
The policy of the department will
be that where the country people
want a dally mail service, they will
be given it, bui it will not be forced
upon communities that do not want
it. Where a daily mail service is pa
tronized it will be continued, but if
the people do not manifest an interest
is such a service, it will be changed
to a tri weekly or even to a weekly
sci vice, and if not patronized, till
delivery service will be dropped alto
gether, forcing recourse to the near
est postofllce to which patrons will
have to send for their mail.
It is inconceivable how so many
country people in the south should
manifest such little interest m a
dally R. F. D. service, which, by uni
versal consent among farmers of the
east and west, is considered to be
the most advanced step ever taken
for the betterment of country life.
In the south it Is found that while
invariably the most up-to-date, pro
gressive farmers are deeply interest
ed in their R. F. D. service, a large
percentage erf the patrons living along
the different routes pay but little at
tention to it, and seem to care very
little whether or not the service is
discontinued. It is such indifference
as this that may result in the dis
continuance of a great many soutii
orn routes; the liberal and progres
sive element paying the penalty for
the lethargy of the indifferent aud un
! progressive residents living along the
route.
In some cases it has been found
that where a route has been establish
ed upon the showing that there wore
as many as 125 homes to be served,
not more than fifty of these homes
would patronize the service after it
was established —the other seventy
flve not even manifesting enough in
terest to put up mail boxes.
CARNEGIE BIFFS SPECULATORS.
Andy Says Gamblers of Wall Street Ought
Not to Be Recognized.
Andrew Carnegie made a vigorous
attack upon certain Wall street meth
ods in a speech at a dinner gives
in his honor by the United States
Military Telegraph Corps at the Ho
tel Manhattan in New York Thuro
day night. Mr. Carnegie declared tfc&t
he had never made a dollar gamb
ling in stocks, and added that It
was time that business men decliae
to recognize men who make money
in Wall street aud render no value
for it.
A CASE OF OLYMPIAN LICENSE.
Mother —Tommie, little boys should
be seen and not heard when taking
their soup.
Tommie —How long will it be before
I can take my soup like papa?—Yon
kers Statesman.
FITS,St Vitua’Dance :N ervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve-
Restorer. #2 trial fjott.le i> nd treatise free
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch St- Phila.. Pa
The way of the transgressor is a
well-beaten path.
A Square Deal
Is assured you when you buy Dr. Pierce’s
family medicines—for all the ingredi
ents entering into them are printed on
the bottle-wrappers and their formulas
are attested under oath as being complete
and correct. You know just what you are
paying for and that the ingredients are
gathered from Nature’s laboratory, being
selected from the most valuable native
medicinal roots found growing In our
American foresOmtuLwhile potent to cure
are perfCFtH# to the most
dellcato wotnCTuiJtl^iimTFrr^Not adrou
ni-a.k’njiolentciTir,to thyir corm.Mitin
A much bet er agent is used both or ex
tracting jmil- nrescmntT Che mc'Jicfnal
principles uscrl In them, viz.—ngye trinity
r>‘lined~i( yc.erine. This agent possesses
1 iitrinsic meniclnai properties of Its own.
being a most valuable antiseptic and anti
ferment, nutritive and soothing demul
cent.
Glycerine plays an important part in
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in
the cure of indigestion, dyspepsia and
weak stomach, attended by sour risings,
heart-burn, foul breath, coated tongue,
poor appetite, gnawing feeling in stom
ach, biliousness and Kindred derange
ments of the stomach, liver and bowels.
Besides curing all the above distressing
ailments, the "Golden Medickl Discovery”
is a specllic for all diseases of the mucous
membranes, as catarrh, whether of the
nasal passages or of the stomach, bowels
or pelvic organs. Even in its ulcerative
stages it will yield to this sovereign rem
edy if its use be persevered in. InChronic
Catarrh of the Nasal passages, it is well,
while taking the "Golden Medical Dis
covery ” for the necessary constitutional
treatment, to cleanse the passages freely
two or three times a day with Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy. This thorough course
of treatment generally cures the worst
cases.
In coughs and hoarseness caused by bron
chial. throat and lung affections, except con
aumptlon in Its advanced stages, the "Golden
Medical Discovery" is a most efficient rem
edy. especially In those obstinate, hang-on
coughs caused by irritation and congestion of
the bronchial mucous membranes. The " Dis”
covery ” is not so good for acute coughs aris
ing from sudden colds, nor must it be ex
pected to cure consumption in its advanced
stages—no medicine will do that—but for all
the obstinate, chronic coughs, wnich, if neg
lected, or badly treated, lead up to consump
tion. it is the best medicine that can be taken.
The marriage of a tailor and a
dressmaker surely ought to be in ac
cord with the eternal fitness of
things.
Garfield Tea is for those who desire an
ideal laxative; it is simple, pure, mild and
potent; it regulates the liver and kidneys,
overcomes constipation and brings Good
Health. It is guaranteed under tne Pure
Food and Drugs Law.
An appreciative audience is always
highly intelligent—from the speaker’s
viewpoint.
FURIOUS HUMOR ON CHILD.
Itching, Bleeding Sores Covered Body
—Nothing Helped Her—Cuticura
Cures Her in Five Days.
"After my granddaughter of about seven
years had been cured of the measles, she
was attacked about a fortnight later by a
furious itching and painful eruption all
over her body, especially the upper part of
it, forming watery and bleeding sores, es
pecially under the arms, of considerable
size. She suffered a great deal and for
three weeks we nursed her every night,
using all the remedies we could think of.
Nothing would help. We tried the Cuti
cura Remedies and after twenty-four hours
we noted considerable improvement, and,
after using only one complete set of the
Cuticura Remedies, in five consecutive days
the little one, much to our joy, had been
entirely cured, and has been well for a long
time. Mrs. F. Ruefcnacht, R. F. D. 3, Bak
ersfield, Csl., June 25 and July 20, 1906.’’
A really good complexion doesn’t
come out in the wash.
Your attention is especially called to the
advertisement of Bridgeport, Ala , in this
issue. A live town with extraordinary op
portunities. A. J. Mcßride, 318 Empire
Building. Atlanta, Ga., will give you full
information.
Anyway the rolling stone doesn’t
get into the mossback class.
■SRP"P-"-—-ITHE
BAlahnaHrifrlPACKAGC
■X % aßpi £
- - *
MW*. 0 <>■ If
If Alabastina is a powder that
you mix with cold water and
wj apply with a brush.
W It is sanitary, it is durable, it
la beautiful, It is economical, it
la easily applied.
Decorate your own walls, get
more sunshine la your home,
make your home more cheer
ful, it coats so little.
If yonr dealer can’t fur
ntsh you we will. Freight
. : j;R charges prepaid on ail or
'■ ders for $5.00 or more,
(enough for 4 rooms.)
Write (or color card, 14
different tints.
rn M GEORGIA PAfflT
MEN ADMIRE KUSUSt
a pretty face, a good figure, but
sooner or later learn that the y'\ *a
liealthy, happy, contented woman at ■ ’ tsO Cjhjgfliy v yl
is most of all to be admired. HI ~ Ac
Women troubled with fainting o wSt! ■ .".:Vv£d ?
spells, irregularities, nervous irrita- n t
bility, backache, the ‘'blues,” and pi • J y C
those dreadful dragging sensations, ft l * M ‘* \ O
cannot hope to be happy or popular, PA v’%*. 3
and advancement in either home, \.v• :) ; &r v 8
business or social life is impossible. JWjVxSi ' S&
The cause of these troubles, how- M ) /JX&I
ever, yields quickly to Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound made
from native roots and herbs It acts
at once upon the organ afflicted and * __
the nerve centers, dispelling effee- MISS EMMA RUNT2LER
tually all those distressing symp
toms. No other medicine in the country has received such unqualified
indorsement or has such a record of cures of female ills as has
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Miss Emma Runtzler, of 631 State St., Schenectady, N. Y., writes: —
“For a long time I was troubled with a weakness which seemed to
drain all my strength away. I had dull headaches, was nervous,
irritable, and all worn out. Chancing to read one of your advertisements
of a case similar to mine cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, I decided to try it and I cannot express my gratitude for the
benefit received. lam entirely well and feel like anew person.”
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the most successful
remedy for all forms of Female Complaints, Weak Back, Falling and
Displacements, Inflammation and Ulceration, and is invaluable in pre
paring for childbirth and the Change of Life.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice
is free and always helpful.
■a© 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT <gv
Oar vehicles and harness have been sold direct from our factory
/A\fco user for h third of a century. Wo fiilp for examination sad
f- approval and guarantee safe deilverr. You are out nothing I /
** not to style, quality ana price. 11 X
YVe Are The Largest Manufacturers In The World "
No. 758. Spindle Seat, Belling to the consumer exclusively. We make 200 styles of jr a a Slnsrle Strn-
Blke dear. Driving Vehicles, Cf< styles of Harness. Send for large, Tree catalogue. Harness with Carved\
anteed *&£?* Elkliart Carri ao e A Harness MI B . Cos, ttlQ * I
Price complete, SB6. SO. Elkhart, Indiana. p I
W. L. DOUGLAS/^*
$3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES - m
w. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE. &
shoes for Everybody at all prwes:ft)
Men’s Shoes, (W to 51.50. Hoys’ Shoes, #S to $1.35. Women's (y
Shoes, $4 to St.so. Misses’&t hildreu’s Shoes,@3.2s to ifKI.OO. tfejPfPK
\V. L. Douglas shoes are recognized by expert judges of footwear A
to be the best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Each 1
part of tho shoe and every detail of the making is looked after
and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard to
time or cost. If I could take you into my large factories at
Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas lisSssEffi
shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, lit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value than any other makes.
W. 1,, ponfrias nan; - end price is stamped on t lie bottom, which protects l!;e wearer a rains t hlizh
prices and inferior shoes. Tnkr Vo Substitute. Sold by the la-st. shoe dealers everywhere.
putt Color Eyelets used exchisiedu- Catalog mailed free. W. 1.. ISO UGI. AS, Jti-ockioii, M usa.
■ New
me
ior because II
ition. The I
N I
[-Stove I
Produces II
me always 9
k results [9
>in three (■
at your (9
escriptive jfl
Fbr the Stock on the Farm
SloaiMs Lininveivt
* Is a whole medicine chest
Price 25c 50c 6 * 1.00
Send Fbr Free Booklet on Horses. Cattle. Hogs & Poultry. I
Address Dr, Earl S. Sloan. Boston, Mass. 1