The Jacksonian. (Jackson, Ga.) 1907-1907, June 07, 1907, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Don't Use ** Practically Pure” White Lead There is no other pigment that is “practically” White Lead—no other paint that has the properties of Pure White Lead Paint. Pure White Lead, good paint that it is, cannot carry adulterants without having its efficiency impaired. To get Pure White Lead durability, see to it that every keg bears the Dutch Boy trade mark—a guarantee that the con tents arc absolutely Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR BOOK “A Talk on raint.” gives valuable information on the paint subject. Sent free upon request. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in whichever of the folloto* ing cities is neatest you: Vem York, Boston, Buffalo. Cleveland. ClnclouAti, Chicago. St. Louis. Philadel phia iJohn T. LrwU t BrOa. Co.J; Pitubuigh [ttaUeau Load A Uil Cos J f /fo YOUNG people 0 ■•to matterhow limited / lx your means or educa * '*’*tion, If you wish a (■■SHQBMHBHB thorough business training and good position, write today for Our Great Half-Rate Offer. Success, Inde pendence and probable FORTUNE guaran teed Don’t delay—write today. DA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, MACON, GA. Libby’s Veal Loaf With Beef and Pork Do yrui lilt* Veal lioaf ? You will surely be delighted with Libby’s kind, made from choice fresh meats, in Libby’a spotless kitchens. It is pure, wholesome and delicious in flavor. Ready for Serving At Ooee.-Simply garnished with sauce it is an appetizing entree for luncheou or dinner, Ask rwr grocer far LlMw’c satd toctet open settles LlMjr'a. Libby, McNeill A Libby Chicago WETWEATHERWORK ■HEALTHFUL AND PLEASANT IF YOU WEAR WATERPROOF [LED CLOTHING • LACK om VtLLOW ‘rfect Proteclion .ongest Service Low in Price >ld Everywhere • . ***lt to cot*©., w M ,!• tawpav u' a* H 6 *ra* ct*s all Push j3 irse can draw the fffjtSj bout help, if you 'riction to almost /Jfjfa :by applying fßw y&AxleJ^|j he wheels. / Ivffl Jthcr lubri- (l ever made T mtM]j rs so f jJWt&I and saves so much j ffm w horsepower. Next time f JrS ' try Mica Axlb Greask. fJvte Standard Oil Cos. C CRESCENT ANTISEPTIC GREATEST HEALER KNOWN TO SCIENCE. Kt Non Poisonous, Non Irritating. Allays Inflammation and stops fJ| pain from any cause, Aa strong aa carbolic acid and as harmless as sweet milk. Cures burns instantly; cures old and chronic sores; 17 A cures sores and inflammation from any cause on man or beast. J<or mgr fowls— cures cholera, sore head and roup. Satisfaction positively guaranteed. AtwihriunicaaM. xtgd.hr ckksccmt chemical co, n. w.rtLTf* SULPHUR BRINGS HEALTH. Parities the Blood and Clears Up the Complexion. Everybody needs to take Sulphur at this season. Nothing like it to purify the blood, clear up the complexion and remove “that tired feeling.” But the only way to take it is in liquid form. Hancock’s Liquid Sulphur taken internally is the best Spring tonic. Applied externally Hancock’s Liquid 6ulphur quickly cures Eczema, Tetter, and all Skin Diseases. Hancock's, the only Liquid Sulphur Ointment, removes Pim ples, Blackheads and Sores, and gives a beautiful soft, velvety skin. Your druggist sails it. It cured Edward D. Herring, of Frederick, Md., of a bad case of Eczema, and be writes: “My face is as smooth as an infant’s.” All-about-Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Cos., Balti more. “Carry well your inches,” Is the ad vice of a famous physiologist. Throw out your chest and look at the sky; look over men’s heads, adds the New York Press. Quit moping along through life with your eyes on the pavement. Most men who strain at stretching go into consumption. They disarrange something of the internal economy. Nearly all gymnasts, par ticularly those who perform on the horizontal bar and trapeze, die of heart trouble or lung affection. Their bodies undergo too much stretching. Acrobats live to a good old age. If you have not received the Argo Red Salmon Cook Book, ask your grocer or send a postal to the Alaska Packers Association, Atlanta, Ga., Advertising Department. Pin Money. Pins were such expensive luxuries that every lady longed to be the proud possessor of a few and her own priv ate allowance was called her pin money. a very shrewd indication of the manner in which the chief part of it was spent. A gift of pins was always eagerly welcomed and highly prized, since the earlier alternative had been but a species of wooden skewer. — London Globe. HOME WEEK IN BOSTON. Sons and Daughters of New England Capital to Visit Scenes of Youth. The greatest event for Boston and for ali New England this season will be the home-coming week in Boston. This will occur at the' end of July, and will attract thousands of persons from every part of the country to the city and the section of the country j where their ancestors lived and | where their affections are centered. The citizens of Boston nave made liberal preparations for a grand cele bration of the history aud achieve ments of Boston and the Common | wealth of Massachusetts. There will [ he a week of midsummer reunions of families and of public festivities. The time Selected is from July 28 to Au gust 3. The home-coming week in Ken tucky attracted half a million visit ors to Louisville and the home-com ing for Georgia was likewise grate fully accepted. There is no doubt of the attraction to Boston of a far great er number of sons and daughters who cherish the traditions and the suc cesses of the people and who venerate the history of the famous city which Is the leader in the literature, art and the civilization of America. The professor of political economy at Yale shows that the wealthy stu dents spend 18 times as much on pleasure and 82 times as much on to bacco aud Intoxicants as poor stu dents. In other words, reckons the Pittsburg Press, they work 18 times as hard at pleasure and S2 times as hard at tobacco and Intoxicants as the poor students, who probably get a good deal more pleasure nevertheless and notwithstanding. Smokers and topers will observe that the professor does not rate drinking and smoking us pleasures There Is nothing more dainty for a picnic or luncheon than Argo Red Sal mon sandwiches or salad. The Cook Book tells you how to prepare them. Ask your grocer. NOTHING TO BRAG ABOUT. First Chicago Little Girl—Edna is always blowing about her forefathers Second Chicago Little Girl —She'd betted not do it too. I’ve had five aud we're expecting a sixth. Non' Eye* Arc cured without pain in one day by Leon ardi's Golden Eye Lotion. There is no oth er eye remedy so soothing, healing, prompt aud effective. It makes strong eyes. Guar anteed or money refunded. Druggists sell it at 25 ots. or forwarded prepaid on receipt of price byS. It. Leonard! A Co.,Tam pa, Flu. If the ladies will keep on courting the chained lightning at the white house, warns the Atlanta Constitu tion, they will force the organization of a “Sapphira Club.” Sheridan in a National Convention. “It is a tradition that no American ever refused a Presidential nomina tion,” said Judge IV. B. Rodgers, City Solicitor of Pittsburg, “and yet I saw a very noted man stammer forth a renunciation of the place, although it had not really been tendered him. It was at the Chicago convention of 1880, when we battled for days be fore Garfield finally won. I was there as one of the 306 who stuck by Grant to the last ditch. Somebody in the convention hall shouted out: ‘Mr. Chairman, I nominate General Phil Sheridan for President.’ There were cheers, and in a moment the little cavalryman was on his feet, very greatly confused, very red in the face and jet determined to speak. ‘Please don’t mention my name,’ he said. ‘I assure you that I have no such am bition. I am loyal to my old chief.’ Then he sat down amid a tremendous uproar of plaudits.”—Washington Her ald. A WONDERFUL GAIN. A Utah Pioneer Tells a Remarkable Story. J. W. Browning, 1011 22d St., Ogden, Utah, a pioneer who crossed tthe Plains in 1848, says: “Five years ago the doctors said I had diabetes. My kidneys were all out of order, I had to rise often at night, looked sallow, felt dull and listless and ir. d lost 40 pounds. My back ached and I had spells of rheumatism and dizzi ness. Doan's Kidney Pills relieved me of these troubles and have kept me well for a year past. Though 75 years old, I am in good health.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Cos., Buffalo, N. Y. Indirect Persuasion. On a vacant lot in West Philadel phia and down in ,i hollow made by raising the grade of the streets new ly opened through some old fanning land there were observed the other day two men huddled over a tiny fire, which was fanned by the same wintry wind that blew through their long and flowing whiskers. One of the knights of the road was eating some thing out of a tin can, and the other was reading a newspaner. “I cou’d dig that channel for the Delaware/’ nuid the reader, “for less money than the subway would cost. I’d get a lot of gold dust and salt the bottom; put it light on the surface and squirt it in with a force pump so as to make more gold the deeper you went. This need only be done in one spot. Then I’d have someone discover that spot and begin to dredge rut the gold The city could then sit back and take in money for permits to dredge, and the channel wouid soon he cleared oul all the way down without fur ther expense.”—Philadelphia Record. Oklahoma’s Constitution provides that nobody can re-elected to a State office there. Evidently the peo ple of Oklahoma do not place much confidence In unwritten laws, is the comment of the Chicago Record-Her ald. The city of Vienna recently built an electric fountaJn in one of its parks. It is very large, and is call able of seventy different effects of illumination. CHILDREN SHOWED IT. Effect of Their Warm Drink in the Morning. “A year ago I was a wreck from coffee drinking and was on the point of giving up my position in the school room because of nervousness. “I was telling a friend about it and she said, ‘We drink nothing at meal time but Postum Food Coffee, and it i3 such a comfort to have something we can enjoy drinking with the chil dren.’ ‘‘l was astonished that she would allow the children to drink any kind of coffee, but she said Postum was the most healthful drink in the world for children as well as for older ones, and that the condition of both the children and adults showed that to be a fact. "My first trial was a failure. The cook boiled it four or five minutes and it tasted so fiat that I was in de spair, but determined to give it one more trial. This time we followed the directions and boiled It fifteen minutes after the boiling began. It was a decided success, and I was completely won by its rich, delicious flavour. In a short time 1 noticed a decided Improvement in my condition and kept growing better and better month after month, until now I am perfectly healthy, and do my work in the school room with ease and pleas ure. I would not return to the nerve destroying regular coffee for any money.” “There’s a Reason.” Read the fa mous little ’’Health Classic,” “Th* Road to Wellvilie,” In pkgs. RAILROADS REASSURED President Hands Corporations a Sop in Speech at Unveiling of General Lawton’s Monument. President Roosevelt was the prin cipal speaker in Indianapolis Thurs day at the decoration day exercises and the unveiling of the Lawton mon ument. As was generally anticipated, the pi’esident took advantage of the opportunity to discuss exhaustively the national railway situation and to outline the administration’s program of regulation and control. The speaker was greeted by an audience of.several thousand people from Indianapolis and the surround ing territory. Enthusiasm manifested itself in continuous cheering, as the president spoke in the most optimis tic terms of the railway situation, de ■ daring emphatically that there was no occasion for alarm or uneasiness, and that the administration proposed holding the balance of justice ex actly even -as between the carriers and the people. In par: he said: ‘ For more than one reason I am peculiarly glad that this year I speak on memorial day in the state of In diana. There is not another class of our citizens to whom we owe so much as to the veterans of the great war. To them it was given to per form the one feat with which no other feat can be compared, for to them it was given to preserve the union. “You have left a country so genu inely reunited that all of us now, in whatever part of this union we live, have a right to feel the keenest pride, not only in the valor and self-devo tion of you, the gallant men who wore the blue, but also in the valor and self-devotion of your gallant op ponents who wore the gray. “The hero whose monument we to day unveil, by his life, bore singular testimony' to the completeness of the reunion. General Lawton, in his youch, fought gallantly in the civil war. .Thirty-three years afterward he again marched to war, this time against a foreign foe, and served with dis tinguished ability and success as a general officer, both in Cuba, and in the Philippines. When he thus served it was in an army whose generals included not only many of his old comrades in arms, but some of his old opponents also, as General Wheeler and General Fitzhugh Lee. Under him —both among the commissioned offi cers and in the ranks —were many men whose fathers had worn the blue serving side by side with others whose fathers had worn the gray ; but all Americans now, and noth ing but Americans, all united in their fealty and devotion to their common flag and their common country.” Reverting to the issues of the day, the president said in part: “Great social and industrial prob lems confront us, and their solution demands on our part unfaltering cour age, and yet a wise, good-natured self restraint; so that on the one hand we shall neither be daunted by dif ficulties nor fooled by those who would seek to persuade us that. the difficulties are insuperable; while on the other hand we are not misled into showing either rashness or vin dictiveness. “One great problem that we have before us is to preserve the rights of property; and these can only be. preserved if we remember that they are in less jeopardy from the social ist and the anarchist than from the predatory rich man. “Every federal law dealing with corporations or with railroads that has been put upon the statute books during the last six years has been a step in advance in the right direction. “There can be no swerving from the course that has been thus mapped* out in the legislation actually enact ed and in the messages in which I have asked for further legislation. We best serve the interests of the honest railway men when we announce that we will follow out precisely this course. It is the course of real, of ultimate conservatism.” PRINTERS MAKE COUNTER MOVE# Typographical Union Moves Comlg Manufacturers’ AssociaP i f At a recent mee.ing of m Mtlg Typographical Union a \ n jff - adopted, requesting the# organization to set asidf be used against the yrw ' on union labor. V.. , The National Manufacturers 3 *! ciation of America has pledged 1 to set aside annually $500,000 to 1 labor unions. This action on the l of the typographical association id tended as a counter move. 1 i Cures Woman’s Weaknesses. We refer to that boon to weak, nervous, suffering women known as Dr. Pieree's Favorite Prescription. Dr. John Fyfe one of the Editorial Staff of The Eclectic Medical Review says of Unicorn root (Helonias Diaica) which is one of the chief ingredients of the "Fa vorite Prescription ”: "A remedy which invariably acts as a uter ine invlarorator * * * makes for normal ac tivity of the entire reproductive system." He continues " in Helonias we have a medica ment which more fully answers the above purposes than any other drug with which I am acquainted. In the treatment of diseases pe culiar to women it is seldom that a case is seen which does not present some indication for this remedial agent.” Dr. Fyfe further says: "The following are among the leading indications for Helonias (Unicorn root).. Pain or aching in the back, with leucorrhcea: atonic (weak) condltloiTa of the reproductive organs of komen, mental depression and ir ritability, associated witi# chronic diseases of the reproductive qtgans of women: constant sensation (ft heat Bn the region of the kid neys; metrorrhagia (flooding), due to a weak ened con/it lon of/the reproductive system; amenor/noeyteKEpressed or absent monthly periody) 1/ a*lslng w iroin or accompanying an abnoamill condition of the digestive organs and fc/temic (thin blood ) habit; draggine sensfilons in the extreme lower part of the abdomen.” If more or less of the above symptom* artTTn'feitefiL no invalid woman catT7ffi; better than taue ur. Pierce s Favorite KrescflbtiMiroiib ol' ine"l£iaing ingredi ents oT\vlTi<sn is Unicorn root, of Helonias. and the medical properties of which it most faithfully represents. Of Golden Seal root, another prominent ingredient of "Favorite Prescription," Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D.. of Ben nett Medical College, Chicago, says: it is an important remedy in disorders of the womb. In all catarrhal conditions * * and general enfeeblement, it is useful.” Prof. John M. Scudder, M. D., late of Cincinnati, says of Golden Seal root: "In relation to its general effects on tha system, there is no medicine in use about which there is such general unanimity of opinion. It is universally regarded as the tonic useful in all debilitated states.” Prof. R. Bariho’ow, M. D.. of Jefferson \* Medical College, say 9 of Golden Seal: "Valuable in uterine hemorrhage, menor rhagia (flooding) and congestive dysmenor rhoea (painful menstruation).'’ . , , i Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription faith fully represents all the above named in gredients and cures the diseases for which they are recommended. The value of a dream depends on how hard you try to make it come true. & J HICKS* SjfICiWDINE ALL ACHES And Nnrvoonoess Tri*l bottle 10c At drug star** Write for Catalogue Let us pay the postage on our large illustrated free catalog; it contains q the most convincing argument in be half of a commercial education, our - practical methods of teaching and the success of our graduates ever compiled. ALMA YOUNG. The lady whose picture we present finished our course, writing 150 words of new matter per minute in five weeks, accepted a position with a large law firm, where four stenogra phers were employed, and in less than a month she was made head stenog rapher. She is soon to take a trip to Europe on the money she has earned in this office. We have had a thriving school in the city of Atlanta for the past three . years, and its graduates are now hold ing many of the very best positions of our southern cities. We have sold more than 100 scholarships in Athens, Ga., and will open a school there on the 24th of June, to be known as the Athens This school is assured a from its opening. exclusive con trol of the® Byrne Simplified Shorthand ® ®*iical Bookkeeping, which e Byrne Business CollegejH W* One of them en joyed - during %v of any American 0k W’ *th t hese systems,?! TL place in a good Wkkeeper or sten- than can ■Bring any other * „ ®ts. Fill in and ®ou wouid prefer ial College, 24 1-2 Anta, Ga.; Athens Ksi 1-2 Clayton St., B^TerbTn^nUon-^ W waß arrested while