The Jacksonian. (Jackson, Ga.) 1907-1907, August 30, 1907, Image 7

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MAN-A-LIN Copyright row. br The Jituaßs 00. MAN-A-LIN Is An Excellent Remedy for Constipation. There are many ailments di rectly dependent upon constipa tion, such as biliousness, discol ored and pimpled skin, inactive liver, dyspepsia, overworked kid neys and headache. Remova constipation and a!i of these ailments dis appear. MAN-A-LIN can be relied up on to produce a gentle action of the bowels, making pills and dras tic cathartics entirely unneces sary. A dose or two of Man-a-lin is advisable in slight febrile attacks, la grippe, colds and influenza, •*.... '*■■■ •> THE MAJJ-A'-LIH :CO, COLUMBUS, OHIO, U. S. A. BACKWARD SEASON. Knicker —Get*- 4 bite? I don’t know whether it-te fisA or frost. —Ngw York Sun.. *. t Cures £onstipatiryfi, diarrhoea. Convulsions, Colic, Sour Stomach, etc, It Destroys Worms, Allays Fevertthne.ss and Colds. It Aids Diges tion. ’ft MakesTEeTHiNG'Easy. Promotes Cheer fulness and Produces Natural Sleep., Removes alDswelling in 8 to go • davs : effects a permanent cure -S/l in 30t6 60 days. Trial treatment free. Nothin gcan be fatrer r IteTlWTr write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons, ' ' Box b Atlanta, Gr HICKS’ SMCAPJDINE all aches And Nervousness Trial bottle Me At drat itrrr Poster That Won. As Lord Bury, the Earl of Albemarle represented Birkenhead In Parliament In 1892, his opponent being Mr. Lever, of Sunlight Soap fame, and he re calls an Interesting anecdote connect ed with his election. A couple of days before the poll his opponent came out with a poster bearing the device, 'Vote for Lever, and swim with the flowing tide,” to which Lord Bury re torted with another inscribed, “V ote for Bury, and dam the flowing tide. It was this poster, according to his friends, that gained him his seat.— Reynolds’s Newspaper. A Circus Victim's Memorial. Each year, the first circus that goes In the vicinity of Gorham, Me., sends a delegation to hold a memorial ser vice at the grave of Clown Sylvester Reynolds, who was killed by being thrown from & horse while riding bareback, September, 1826, and the event is published in “The American Clipper,” of New York, the showman’s official paper. This year the service Was performed by the Silver Plate Show, which exhibited -in Norway. Kennebec Journal. Coleridge and the "Times.” It cannot be generally known that in 1805 the principals of the Times altogether rejected an offer Coleridge made them of his services. Writing in this month’s Albany, Mr. T. 11. S. Escott tells of how the archives of the times used to include a memorandum from the poet-philosopher offering his services and specifying his terms, but imposing certain conditions affecting the general policy of the paper. How ever, says Mr. Escott, neither the Walters nor their editors would have divided their prerogative with a con tributor even so illustrious as S. T. C. Moreover, apart from personal irreg ularities, his recent performances in journalism elsewhere were of a kind not likely to have recommended him to Printing House Square. He had written in the Courier an article against the Duke of York, and while the number in which it waas to appear was going through the press the Treas ury got wind of Coleridge’s contribu tion, and intervened so effectively that the two thousand copies which had al ready been printed off were suppress ed, and the offending article never ob tained full publicity.—Westminster Ga zette. Claim Agent’s Story. "Yes,” said the railway claim agent, "we come across queer things some times. The queerest thing in my ex perience was the case of a minister. “This man was hurt in a rear-end collision and we gave him $5,000 dam ages. At the end of the year we got a letter from him that ran something like this: “My salary is $2,000, and the acci dent caused me to lose it for twelve month. My medical expenses were $750. My board at a mountain sana torium for six months was SBSO. Other expenses due to the accident were, in round numbers, $1,000; total, $4.- GOO. You gave me $3,000. Now I am back in the pulpit again, as well and strong as ever, and I have S4OO of your ni'Cmpy on my hands. Not being entitled to that sum, I do what any rainigtqr would do in my place—l re turn the money, to you as per check enclosed.” “How was that for honesty?” the claim agent. “The ministers are a wonde-rfiil lot. We sent the S4OO chQck ‘hack ”to this honest minister and he gave it to charity in our name.”—New Orleans Tjmes-Demo crat. A Franklin Relic. People of all- “persuasions,”. Bays the London Chrdnicle, will regret to hear that the old Sardinian Chapel, oil Lincoln’s-inn-fields, is- after-all, to be demolished. It had remained stand-, ing when so many surrounding build ings had been swept awa*y in 'the making of Kings way that one had hoped it would be spared the general fate. Little remains of the original chapel of 1648, for, in the “ftb Popery nots“of 1780, the fury of the rabble selected it for espe'eial injury, so as to necessitate an .almost entire, re building. Just opposite, in 17-25, when he was a journeyman printer, lodged Benjamin Franklin, with a Roman Catholic widow lady and her daught er; a very uncommon sort of printer, as his fellow workmen in Great Wild street thought, for among the fifty or so employed in Mr. Watt’s office, beer drinkers all, Franklin stood out as the only water drinker—teetotaler was a word not known till nearly a century later. Incandescent Train Lamps. Germany claims to have made a dis covery of great importance for the lighting of railway trains. Up to the present, except in those rare cases where electricity is used, acetylene has been the principal illuminant. So far all efforts to adapt the use of in candescent gas to the conditions of railway’ traffic had failed. At last the ! difficulty has been surmounted by the : obtaining of an incandescent gas lamp which will resist the roughest shocks ; and jostlings of railway carriages. Thirty-five thousand carriages on the Prussian and Hessian State lines will ; shortly be equipped with these lamps, ! ; —London Globe. FITS, St. Vitus'Dan re: Xeryotts Diseases per manently cured by’ Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. ?2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. A HAPPY COUPLE. The Man— None of their relatives will speak to them since their elop ment. i " The Girl— They ought to be a very ! happy couple. —Puck. Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for teething.softens | tion, allays paugcures wind colic, 25c a hot tie ANOTHER POLICY. Knicker —So you think commuters should be regulated by the President. Bocker— Yes, they are common car | Tiers.— New York Sun. You Look Prematurely Old DOCTORS PRESCRIBE SULPHUR. But Sulphur Should Be Used In Liquid Form Only. "Hancock’s Liquid Sulphur is the moot wonderful remedy for Eczema I have ever known,” writes Dr. W. W. Leake, of Or lando, Fla., who was cured of a case of years' standing. Dr. W. A. Heard, of Maitland, Fla., was cured of Eczema after he had suffered for thirty years, and says: "Hancock's Liquid Sulphur is the finest remedy for all Skin troubles I have ever used or prescribed.'• Doctors everywhere prescribe it, but they say Sulphur should bo used in liquid form only, as it is in Hancock’s Liquid Sulphur. Druggists sell it. Booklet free, if you write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Cos., Balti more. It cures all Skin and Scalp Diseases, if used in connection with the wonderful Hancock s Liquid Sulphur Ointment. A POOR JOB Candidate —Yes, as I’ve already told you, gentlemen-, you see before you a self-made mam Votca, (from the back.) —Better ha’ put the job out, misterJ —Punch. w-S II RKFEBENC* TO Jr ALf X a JOHN K. DICKEY’S Old Reliable EYE WATER It corse sore eyes snd granulated Hde. It strengthens weak eyes. It cools and soothe, a sore eye. It rofreshee and strengthens e tired eye. It don't hurt when applied. It (fleli good—children don t drwd it TkagenalriE olway* oacloEod in a rod folding bo* Avoid Imitations or something recommended lost as good. For chronic sore ere lids, sties and diseased Eridltlon of roote of e/e lashes, use Dickey s Old iliabls Ere Halve. At all stores or by mall Kota. DICKEY DRUG CO., Bos SO, Bristol. Tens. gray hair®. Usv “LA CREOLE’ HAIR RESTORER. frice. Si.OO, retail. I i Li i lIA V I ] i Paint Purity J The Dutch Boy Fainter is found only on kegs of Pure White Lead—simply metallic lead cor roded. This White Lead is not only pure pigment—it is pure paint. Compositions that are only partly White Lead are only partly paint. The trade mark below guarantees absolutely Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. All first class dealers. Send for what we call our “XX" book, which gives valuable information on the paint subject—free. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in whichever cf the follow ing cities is nearest you: New York, Boston, Buffalo, Cleve land, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Philadelphia? JohnT. Lewis & Bros.Co.), Pittsburgh (National Lead & Oil Cos.) ffffffff | Don't Eusli3 \\ The horse can,draw the load without help, if you ■ l\ reduce friction tfo almost I jflb&H l\ nothing by applying |||v, jjfi ;M bl M to the wheels. j [[ml No other lubri- (l llklTw VIM cant ever made T JraggH wears so long f j/Jww and saves so much jjfm horsepower. Next time f * try Mica Axle Grease. Standard Oil Cos. of Inewrpevated ODTASII ' Doubles the Value I of a truck-farm. It is Nature’s fattening food for f vegetables. It makes them large, meaty and delicious. | Send a postal card for our free booklet on “Truck Farming.” It is scientific, and it is OERMAN^ send her absolutely free a large trial box of raxt.ine with book of Instruc tions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. DAYTIRIC'‘^ rM I feetlons, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused by femi nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over these troubles is extra ordinary and gives immediate relief. Thousands of women arc using ana rec ommending it every day. fio' cents at druggists or by mail. Bemeraber, however, IT COSTS YOTT NOTH ING TO TRY IT. THE it. PAXTON CO., Huston, Mass. $150.00 BUYS The most complete Saw Mill built in the Southern States. Gainesville lYon Works, Gainesville, Ga. PIEDMONTeOLLEGE DEMOREST, GA. Healthful mountain location* Kegujar Preparatory and College course*; apodal in BuMiijeiM, lXmiettic Science and Mtuio.’ ‘FbirfifcridiJ’advantage*. Rouh' nttUie prices. For i>4taloguu,uud i ur ther Jufor-- motion address , M * , BENRT C. NEWELL, AcllS|;:Meiit' nacoochee"iiiSTiTßiu^;' I Superior health reorfc. Mont beHuttfnT i>ot-in state. ‘Telephone communioatipn. itinuaL. I Oi*ritinii. The PROFAISK and those wholml NK not admitted. Morals of the community dKXdlont. Good ; board from $8 to $lO por jnonth. Gonrso of study: Mu sic, Literary. Art arid KlncuCion. Full fhoulr.v. ‘Graduates and .Oupulnjf Wept. L 1907. ! Write for cat aloifiio today. r ■' J.T. WADE, r ye j.D, Mcl’llftl/df V.Prce., COMMERCIAL COLLEGE OF KENTUCiiy’WIMERSmr _ LLXIJiOTN,-KY. • Medal awardoil Prof. Smith eWorld' Fair 11 Hook-keeping, Tluinat, Rhfrrtftiaml Type- Wriijntf and Tulrgraphy taught. .Siiua tiouk. (rHOuan*ti rceoive Ky. University diploma, begin m>w. Addre.,,. YYILIUK K. HMITII Prck-t Ky SOUTHERN ...COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Ifali session October to April; Spring ffessidn, April to October. I.argent Pharmacy Hohooi South.' Drug Store In the Oollego.>Free Book*,kavlng $X> book expense, barge new building and KqpLpment, three Labors torlaa. Demand Inrpiir graduate* *roede supply. Tuition |M per gesalon. Address W. B. FRffKMAN, Secretary, 93 Luckie Ht , Atlanta, Oa. . —ii !■■■■ 12.. , . eiA, . ■■ , -a —a. a.. e. i m A ArtA TEI CPO ADUCDO lA/AMTCn From this 1 nstituta bflfnre Tktoliw I II j.ICLCUnniItCIIU If Mil ICU exoluaivo TalagrufJi lnatitato, it a* n Bnalaaaa o#l* , I II I le*e. In chrirge of ez-railway officials. Fstahliahed Twonty-ULO Yoars. Main linM of L. 41 VI vVV/‘Nisft. K.*lh HolmoleCOuma/; VLisition* payln SOO por month ana upward absolutely. gnarant<l ■i— ii ■■■■hi— our graduates under a $l5O Guaranty Bond. Yi can work fur yoar •ipcosel, Wnf for Catalog. S ATXON Ala TKLEii HA Fit IfXW TITUTIL l liiciinintl, ObU. ANDREW COLLEGE ... CUTHBERT, GEORGIA. ESTABLISHED MORE THAN FIFTY YEARS. A high grade college for girls and young ladles, offering superior advantages for rsgular and special courses Highest point above sea level in Houth Georgia. Perfect health rsooed. Climate Ideal. Hat a greau Iwstorv and numbers ain'ong ; Its alumnae sours of the nobis*l Women in Georgia and. the South. Next session opens Sept. 18. Address REV. J. W, MALONE, President. Cuthbert, Ga. IM REPAIRS m Ka |8 m T&iM SAWS, RIBS, Bristle Twine, Babbit, &c., far any makt 1 I sHISj of Gin EINGINCS. BOILERS and PRESSES ® ™ ™ and Repairs for same. Shaftlnr. Pulleys, Belting, In lectors, Pipes, Valves and Fittings, Light Saw, Shingle, and Lath Mills, Gasoline Engines Cane Mills in stock. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPL) COMPANY. Augusta. Ga. W. L. DOUGLAS A ~ $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES Th| 3 WORLO FOR EVERY MEMBER OF WMifßfflm. THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES. *|OS ftnn iTmmnyonmwhoomn provaW. L. Kf bMk )Dougina doom not make < ae/f Mlt. /more Mon'a 13 & (HH.&U mhooa - Ij^a FHrWflf M f than any othor manufacturer. MMtSJS THE 11EASON* W, 1,. Douglas shoes are worn by more people in all walks of life than any other make, is because of their excellent style, easy-fitting, and jnpertor wearing qualities. xffijMfPftl’i.r’ M tW The selection of the leathers and other materials for each part the shoe, and ev.-rv detail of the making Is looked after by ySMBkUf/Wjm the most complete organization of superintendents, foremen and skilled shoemakers, who recsirs the lligbast wages paid in tlie st.oe Industry, ami wliose workmanship cannot be excelled. 'Qtyuf m If I could take yon lnt'< my large factories at Brockton. Mass., t yflwdm ai.d show you bow carefully W. 1,. Douglas shoes are made, you w * !f r 0 ft Would thou understand why they hold their shape, tit better, ' c ,_ -pi* wear longer and are of greater value than any other make. ” Lr * v * eo l My $4 Gilt Edge and SB Gold Bond Shooa cannot be equalled at any price. CAUTION! The genuine have W. 1,. Douglas name and price*stain|>e<l on bottom. Take N< (Substitute.. Ask your denier for W. 1,. Douglas shoes. If he cannot supply you, send direct to factory. Bhoe* sent everywhere by mail. Catalog free. W.L.Dou*Jas, Brockton, Mass. C CRESCENT ANTISEPTIC CREATEBT HEALER KNOWN TO SCIENCE. Non Poisonotu, Non Irritating. Allays Inflammation and stop* ■A pain from any cause. As strong as carbolic acid and as harm leas aa lA sweet milk. Cures burns instantly; cures old and chronic sores; AT* cures sores and inflammation from any cause on man or beast. For Sir fowls—cures cholera, sore head and roup. Satisfaction positively “ guaranteed. For Soto by all Dealer*. Hfgd. by CKKHt KXT CIIEMICAI. tO„ Vu Worth, Tamaa Avery & Company 0 SUCCESSORS TO avery & McMillan, SI.OS South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Go. —iAL KINDS OF— MACHINERY Rollabls Frick Engines. Boilers, all Sizes. Wheat Separators. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, ‘Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs. Steam Governors. Full line Engines A | Mill Supplies. Send for frss Catalogue* tf lN |ERSMITHS ’ CHillTonic ClitLLo FI.Vf H i ; lry . • • ... (At3s-’O7)