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Syrupsffigs
Cleanses tha System Ejfect
ually;Dispels Colas and Head
aches due to Constipation;
Acts naturally, acts truly as
a Laxative.
Best forMen\vhmen an JCkild
ren -youn gand Old.
% its jB ertejicial E||ects
Always huv tKe Genuine vvKicK
hasihe jull name o jthe Com
"CALIFORNIA
ffevSxRUP Cos.
In whom it is manufactured .printed on the
v front of every package.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS,
one size only, regular price S(R per bottle.
Expert are now able to
the writing or ariy particular type
writing machine, just as they recog
nize the penmanship of an individual.
Surely that’s discouraging, observes
the New York Herald, to tihe writers
of anonymous letters.-
SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
With Eczema—Her Limb Peeled and
Foot Was Kaw—Thought Amputa
tion Necessary—Believes Her
Life Saved by Cuticura.
“I have been treated by doctors for
twenty-five years ior a bad case of eczema
on my leg. They did their best, but
failed to cure it. My doctor had advised
me to have my leg cut off. At this time
my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot
was like a piece of raw ilesh, and 1 had to
walk on crutches. 1 bought a set of Cuti
cura Remedies. After the first two treat
ments the swelling went down, and in two
months my leg was cured and the new skin
came on. The doctor was surprised and
said that. he would use Cuticura for his
•wn patients, i have now been cured over
seven years, and but for the Cuticura Rem
edies 1 might have lost my life. Mrs. J. it.
Renaud, 277 Mentana St., Montreal, Que.,
Feb. 20, 1907.”
The Seven Stars Hotel at Village
Green, Pa., has been a public house
for 145 years. It was the headquar
ters of General Cornwallis in 1777.
To Drive Out Malaria and Build U{]
the System
Take the Old Standard Grove's Taste
less Chill Tonic. You know what you
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
and children. 50c.
The Methodists have found <a. name
for the American divorce habi't, de
clares the Haverhill Gazette. They
call it “consecutive polygamy” and*.
In view of the ec-ntJir.ious performance,
that isn't halt bad.
REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIN.
Abbott’s east Indian cohn paint removes
#oms, root and all, without cutting or burn
ing and leaves no soreness. It cures soft
ooms between the toes, bunions or sore,
oallous spots. It cures all quick and per
manent. Get It at your druggist or send
15c. to The Abbott Cos., Savannah, Ga.
Those expecting to be bothered
with the boll weevil sooner or later
should do a little getting
ready for it, by raising turkeys. They
re good weevil-catchers.
Atk Your Dealer Far Allen’s Foot-Ease.
A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns.
Bunions,Swollen, Sore. Hot, Callous, Aching
Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen
Foot-Ease makes new or tight sho-s ea sy. -
all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. *• "
cept no substitute. Sample mailed i R
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, hi. *•
If culling the flock has been de
layed. do more than make a resolu
tion now to do it —do the culling.
Breed up this year more, not down.
HAD ECZEMA 15 YEARS.
Mrs. Thomas Thom]ison, of
Ga., writes, under date of April 23, liwi: i
suffered /5 yea-s with tormenting eczema;
had the best doctors to prescribe; but notn
ing did me any good until I got tettekine.
It cured me. lain sp thankful.
Thousands of others can testify to similar
cures. Tettebine is sold by druggists or
sent by mail for 50c. by J. T. Shuptbink,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
Did you ever use ducks to clean
potatoes of bugs? Try it at the
opportunity, and you'll feel more
kindly towards them.
John R. Dickey’s old reliable eye water
cures sore eyes or granulated lids. o
hurt, feels good; get the genuine m r P
The early chicks miss most of the
troubles caused by red bugs anil too
hot sunshine during their critical
period.
Hicks’ Caputline Cures Headache,
Whether from Cold, Heat. Stomach, .or
Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangeroua
drugs. It's Liquid. Effects immediately.
10c., 25c., and 50c., at drug stores
It Is a mean womaa. insist* the
Philadelphia Inquirer, who says that
the Merry Widow hats which are the
rage just. now are smaller than the
panamas men sported a few > ears
■go. But the men admitted they
were ridiculous and soon gave them
Ap, which is more than the women
will do.
S Good Roads. &
Loss From Bad Roads.
A somewhat novel case was brought
in the Washington County courts yes
terday. It is that of a farmer who
sues for damages because the public
roads in his section of the county
were impassable. He had hay to sell
and had a market for it in town, but
could not make delivery. His suit
is to recover the amount he lost by.
reason of his inability to get the hay
to market.
It is not proposed here to discuss
the legal aspect of this claim. That
may be left to the courts of competent
jurisdiction. But the case is in
structive in its economic aspect. Cit
izens of rural communities beyond
numbering suffer heavy losses an
nually because the highways are unfit
for the transportation to market of
the commodities they have to sell. In
some cases the fault is their own, for
they will not willingly contribute to
road improvement. In other cases
the taxes they pay are squandered
with hardly a pretense of making
passable roadways. In too many
cases the men who undertake to su
pervise the road making have no
knowledge of the subject, and, ap
parently, not enough of common
sense to know that water will not run
up hill. One of the most frequent de
fects in the roads is lack of drainage,
the water being so directed as to tear
up the roadway, or to stand in pud
dles.
Scientific road building lias been
undertaken by the State and by a
few counties. But it must be appar
ent to all that it will require many
years for the State to create a system
of good roads. Its aim is principally
to educate localities to the advantage
in having good roads and in the best
methods of building them. The
townships must co-operate and they
must work on their own account,
whether they be held liable for dam
ages by the courts or not. They ought
to build roads right.—Pittsburg Dis
patch.
The Roads.
It is difficult to take up any State
newspaper these days without reading
of teams stuck in the mud. Avery
amusing paragraph in this journal
the other day told of a man of eighty
years who had walked ten miles be
cause he did not want to try to rake
his horse take the impossible journey.
The fun of the thing was that the
truth was behind it. The average
country road is practically impassable
at this season of the year.
If the Legislature met in the early
spring, the efforts .to get good roads
appropriations would not require half
as much exertion. When the frost is
all out of the ground and wheeling is
good, it is hard for people to recollect
how abominable the traveling was a
short time before. To-day everybody
that tries to move about on wheels,
from a funeral procession to a wad
ding party, is liable to land in a mud
hole, wagons up to the hubs, horses
helpless, passengers equally helpless
as to progress, but able to express
their sentiments. Now is the time for
people to study the good roads ques
tion and to form the impressions that
they must carry with them all t'te
year. If they want to be able to use
the roads all the year round, they
must insist oil having roads that can
be driven upon and will sustain the
load. Every mile of good roads leads
to better conditions of living.
The State has at last started in up
on this improvement on a reasonably
broad and intelligent system. The
sooner the results appear the better,
and each good bit of road is ail in
centive to another like it. Let the
good work go on.—Hartford Courant.
Why a Eenefit.
Good roads are a benefit to the
farmers because they render trans
portation of farm products easier;
ihey facilitate travel and shorten the
time to and from town or city mar
kets; they are humane in that they
lighten the draft for horses; they
make driving, on pleasure or business
trips, more enjoyable; they foster a
neignborly spirit through communi
cation; they are an aid to the Federal
Government in establishing free rural
delivery mail routes; th.ey are busi
ness promoters, and a credit to any
community, State or nation, and
linal.y are an index to the intelli
gence, prosperity and activity of the
people.
All these points are in legitimate
support of the construction and main
tenance of good roads. Many other
reasons might be cited in their favor.
It does seem anomalous that amid all
our boasted national progress, this
great necessity of modern civiliza
tion should be kept so far in the back
ground.
The nation needs better ajyd more
substantial highways, and it is hope
ful to see indicat.ons that this sub
ject will soon receive more attentif-n
from our national and State law-mak
ers than heretofore. The importance
of good rural highways is being more
thoroughly recognized by business
men and legislators than ever before,
and the farmers need no argument to
convince them that better roads will
improve their business materially. „
The Englishman's ardent admira
tion for the Tap i-s not appreciated
by the Canuk, notes the Sacramento
Union. The mistress of the seas
made a mistake when she took the
Mikado into her political family.
FITS, St. V ifcus' Dance: Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,031 Arch St.. Phila.. Pa.
Many a man gets the upper hand
by dealing it to himself from the bot
tom of the deck.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
t oc thing, softens thegu ms, reducesinflamma-
Lion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
The Oldest E-Congressman.
“The oldest living ex-member of
the Congress of the United States
is the Hon. James C. McGrew, of
Kingswood, in my State,’’ said Rep
resentative Sturgess, of the Second
West Virginia District, at the Ren
nert.
“Mr. McGrew is now ninety-eight
years of age. He is in full posses
eion of his mental faculties and would
be in good physical condition but
for injuries sustained in an accident
in Floridh some little while ago. He
was thrown out of a carriage, the
horses of which had bolted, and both
legs were broken. The surgical work,
it is claimed, was faulty and Mr. Mc-
Grew has since been forced to walk
with a cane. Otherwise for a man
so closely verging upon a century he
is in good shape.”—Baltimore Ameri
can.
FACTS
FOR SICK
WOMEN
LYDIA E. PINKHAM
No other medicine has been so
successful in relieving the suffering
of women or received so many gen
uine testimonials as has Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
In every community you will find
women who have been restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound. Almost every
one you meet has either been bene
fited by it, or has friends who have.
In the Pinkham Laboratory at
Lynn, Mass., anywomananyday may
see the files containing over one mil
lion one hundred thousand letters
from women seeking health, and
here are the letters in which they
openly state over their own signa
tures that they were cured by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s V egetable Compound.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has saved many women
from surgical operations.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound is made from roots and
herbs, without drugs, and is whole
some and harmless.
The reason why Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound is so
successful is because it contains in
gredients which act directly upon
the feminine organism, restoring it
to a healthy normal condition.
Women who are suffering from
those distressing ills peculiar to their
sex should not lose sight of these
facts or doubt the ability of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
to restore their health.
Says the Baltimore American: A
sound mind in. a sound body is stilt
the college ideal, and there never will
be a return to the days of cadaverous
scholarships, when the studemt wowt
through the dull round of study with
out appeal to his physical nature, at
the age when the demands of the
latter are closely linked to health and
success In the battle of life.
BOWEL
TROUBLES
CHILDREN
TEETHING
Malaria Makes Pale Sickly Children
The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it
is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children. 50c.
MR. GROCER SAW A CHANCE
t° work off some cheap coffee he had long had on hand, —
told his customers times were hard (!) and loctsa pound
was enough t& pay for coffee. They followed his adtrieo
and got a tasteless, dyspepsia-breeding article requiring a
double quantity to make any showing for strength. Befern
he realized it his customers were going elsewhere to buy
’ delicious, double-strength, last-twice-as-loug LUZIANX*
i ; COFFEE, whose price-s>6cts-is really only half as expo*-
' s * ve as Me 15cts kind.
W| LUZIANNE COFFEE Tk, ,?iHL fe
—
Penmanship of Author.
Among present day novelists the
prize for good handwriting should
be awarded to Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle. His manuscripts are a per
fect picture of clear, precise callig
raphy, as easy to read as type
Another good penman is Max Pem
berton, and no one can see even as
much as his signature without detect
ing the artist in every curve. He
is trying for the eyes, for he errs
on the side of minuteness. One of
the most businesslike "fists’’ is that
of Frank T. Bullen. Bulien told the
present writer that the very act of
writing was a real joy to him and
that, he was never happier than when
covering page after page with his
sloping, schoolmasterlike characters.
Hal Caine writes a very plain but
not particularly distinguished hand.
Unlike F. T. Bullen, he declares the
act of writing bores him, yet he never
dictate*. He can, however, write any
where, even like Mark Twain, in bed.
Stanley Weyman and J. M. Barrie
are both good penmen, but Coulsou
Kernahan often causes brain rack
ing on account of the smallness of
his writing.—From Tit-Bits.
No Use Bothering.
An engineer from Sunderland was
spending a few days in London with
a friend, and after a busy morning
sight-seeing the IxmdoneT chose a
large restaurant for luncheon, think
ing it would be a novel experience
for the man from the north.
The visitor appeared to enjoy his
luncheon, but kept looking in the di
rection of the door.
“What are you watching?” asked his
friend, rather annoyed.
“Well,” was the quiet reply, “A*
keepin’ an eye on ma topcoat,,”
“Oh, don’t bother about that,” said
the other. “You dont see me watch--
ing mine.”
“No,” observed the guileless engi
neer, “t.hee has no call to. It’s ten
minutes sin thine went.” Philadel
phia Ledger.
Mend dealer’* imuie und too Irani pound
carton of “tiO-M a 10-Team” Itorux with 4c.
■tamp* and we will mall illuMtrntod book
let. giving many ae for “Borax In rbo
Home, Farm and Dairy,” alw thin Ince de
alicu, 15 by 1H inches, on cloth ready lor
work inn. Eft EE. Adtlre**,
PACIFIC COASTIKIUAXCOh Sieyr York.
TAtzTofT)
MlipiAN SLIVER TROUBLES
I WKitA MILD BUT EFFECTIVE IN ITS ACTKM
TRY A BOTTLE STIMUUTM THE LIVER TO NORMAL ACIIOM
•IX YOUR DEALER FOR IT
Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial
Ifever fails to relieve at once. It Is the favorite baby medicine of
the beet narses and family doctors. Mothers everywhere stick to it.
and urge their friend* to give it to Children for Colic. Dysenter y.
Cramps, Diarrhoea, Fins. Foul •Stomach and all Stoma ;n and Bowel
Ailments. Yon can depend on it. Don't worry, bat take Dr. Biaaers
Huckleberry Cordial. 2prent* at drug stores. or by mail. Circulars Tree.
HALTIWANGEK TAYLOR DRUG CO., Atlanta, Ga
CURES STOMACH-ACHE IN TEN MINUTES
BMttmama
W FOR MEN "1
A shoe that i3 too big may not pinch, but it is a bad fit just the same. I
ft What you want is a shoe that matches the shape of your foot at the TANARUS
IS place where your weight rests, — not too large or too (.mail, but exactly |P
right. SKREEMERS are shoes like that, and rrrjvssssT *
the style is there, too. Look for the label. jl'lf ljl - ***** •
FRED. F. FIELD CO.. Brockton, Mass. FHBjJffijCl
A Beaton, pastor says that the only
way a man could justify the use of
tobacco would be to consent to lot
Ma wife share i'ts use with him. But
suppose his better half should insist
on selecting the brand? asks tho
Springfield Union.
Hicks’ Capudinc Cures Wnmea'i
Monthly Pains, Backache, N erv
and Headache. It's Liquid. Effects imme
diately. Prescribed by physicians with best
results. 10c.. 25c., and 50c., at drug stores.
The paper trust sees the ax descend
ing, but it is nimble enough to side
step lightning, observes the Atlanta
Constitution.
BtOZKMA CUKEIL
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, G 0,., says: **l
■uttered agony with a severe case of mm*
ma. Tried six different remedies and wtm
in despair, when a neighbor told me to try
t-huptriue’s tettehink. After using M
worth of your tettehink and soap Imb
completely cured. I cannot say too nutolk
In its praise." Tettehink at druggtrto o*
by mail 50c. Hoap 25c\ J. T. Shitbz*%
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
It is far better to feed and water
ducks and chickens separately. Qm
fall in the same class as duck*. w
far as beiing undesirable whtw
chickens are fed or watered.
35c. WILL CUKE IODB CORKS
If you invest It in a bottle of abbott’s un
INDIAN CORK PAINT. It remove. hardorooff
corns, bunions or sore, callous spots on tho
feet, warts or indurations of the akin. X*
pain, no cutting, no ‘‘eating.” of tho (ML
no after soreness; quick, safe, sura. II
druggist or by mail from Thb Abbott On*
Savannah, Ga.
The Kaiser believes In t ho M
adage, “Early to bed,” and wow W
side any of his sons who may amarn
in later than 10 o’clock.
Take the Place of Calomel
Oonutlpation *end* poinonoiiH matter bnvttitaß
through the body. Dull headache, Hour
Feted Breath, Bleared Eye*. Lots of Energy iMMi
net! to are the siirent ttlgnsof he affliction. KMftrl
Fiver Pill* poutively cure constipation. They mmvmim
the -tliunjinh liver to better action, oleeneo
Imiwhlh, strengthen tho weakened paytii, lnduo* UW*
tite and aid dlffimtion. They do not Salivate, wBM
ter what you eat, drink or do. Price 26 cent# fMMfc
your dealer or direct from
J. M. YOUNG. JR.. WAYCROS3. GA.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and tree from use
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odsw,
which water, soap and tooth preparation
alone cannot do. A
fecting and deodor
izing toilet requisite
cellence and econ- I V-VC j |
omy. Invaluable
Large Trial Sample
WITH "HCALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK BENT
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mm.
flmnQV film
fllw mM I 111111 W
n a TW Sw W J R€i !01.
V *-■ 1 , __
y Removes all swelling la IWM
I days ; effects a permanent on
in 10 to 60 davs Trial treamrwwt
Nothingcaabefafaw
SJ- year*.