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gglbes Closes Deal.
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ir for tar ilioipii
Huy. the "wtiH-r trust''
■] of all the
(if tiirr,.
icpiiw.'i' of
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I Smith .Maiiiifart urine;
v, ail acred itud Wc.-litiK-
in to hr Known a - tii"
Ktowah Powc r Company, tir.il
Power Company, absorl.inn
Georgia Klectric Company
power plants and sites at
Buford, Newnan and Tallu-
with the Etowah Power
Comrpny's plant at Carters-
Hfand the North Georgia Electric
7'lant at Bull Sluice, on
( A Chattahoochee, north of Atlanta.
||a-ise all the important power o:i
■ftllalah. Chattahoochee and Eto
j^^^Hvers.
MJ estimated that the Northern
Company of Michigan
the power at an outlay
000,000. As fast as the im-
are completed, on a eertifi-
H of the engineer of the Georgia
the Knickerbocker
Hf CftTpiaSp will pay the Michigan
rfmey received from the
bondsL
of State Phil
Hook issued a charter*to the Citizens’
of Brinson, with capital stock
HLSS,OOO.
W Atlanta. —Dr. W. S. Elkin, Jr., well
pnown Atlanta druggist, was elected
president of the Georgia board of
Kharmaey at the annual meeting of
■hat body held in the nail of represen
tatives i Q the capitol. C. D. Jordan
B)f Monticelio, Ga., was elected secre
tary. The other members of the
Board, S. E. Bayne of Macon, H. H.
■and, Jr., of Augusta and H. C. Shup-
Hfre of Savannah, were all present,
of the meeting was the
of applicants for drug-
to practice in the state.
W Atlanta Correspondent
■nsus FIGURES INTERESTING. !
■
County May Get Place in I
the "Big Six.”
Bvtlanta.—Conjectures as to the six j
■ranties which will form the ‘‘big
six” after the completion of the 1910
census, was brought up anew in state
political circles upon receipt of re
turns from Laurens county from the
census bureau in Washington.
These returns show that Laurens
has gained almost an even 10,000 in
population since the census of 1900,
the figures then being 25,908, and
these just announced being 35,901.
Fulton, Chatham, Richmond, Bibb,
Floyd and Thomas are the six coun
ties now having three representatives
in the lnwer house of the general as
sembly, but it is conceded that the
last named will in all probability give
way to come other county, when the
complete returns are in, owing to the
fact that by the formation of the new
county of Grady, Thomas lost a big
slice of its territory.
And those who have kept in touch
with the growth of the various coun
ties of the state, are agreed that the
county which take Thomas' plaoe
among the ' big six”will come from
the following four: Laurens, Burke,
Muscogee and Washington, with the
odds in the order in which they are
given: Burke was formerly one of
the three representative counties, but
gave way to Thomas following the
census of 1910, and it is not at all
improbable now that it will in turn
uisplaee Thomas. The other five
counties of the “big six” have had
three representatives for the past
t wenty years.
The census returns of 1900 for the
counties agreed upon as standing the
best chance to secure an extra repre
sentative this year were as follows:
Burke, 30,165.
Muscogee, »29,536.
Washington, 28,377.
Laurens’ magnificent gain of 40 per
cent, will, in the opinion of many po
litical wiseacres, give that county the
place, for while the three other coun
ties could pass Laurens by a gain of
a lesser per cent., the growth of the
former county is considered so phe
nomenally that it is not thought that
Muscogee, Washington or Burke will
go higher.
This is, however, all conjecture, and
it would be no very great surprise
should one of the other three show
not only a greater total population
than Laurens, but even a greater per
cent, of gain.
STATE HOUSE OFFICERS PLEASED
Democratic Victories Throughout the
Country Cause of Rejoicing.
Atlanta. —A manifestation of great
rejoicing and exceeding gratification
over the sweeping wave of Democrat
ic victories, which brought several of
the long time Republican states into
the former's ranks, marked all offices
of the state house and all of the heads
of departments and minor officials
even down to the janitors were dis
cussing the outlook for the party from
the carrying of these states.
Governor Brown was greatly pleas
ed over the quelching of the Roose
velt forces in New York state, as
well as the other sweeping victories
which will make the year go down
in history as one of the most notable
in the political complexion of the na
tion.
“The New York victory,” said Gov
ernor Brown, “shows that the per
sonality of one man cannot be heJd
up to the people of a state against
the conditions which his party have
wrought and brought about. Mr.
Roosevelt’s personality has failed to
score for him and his party as has
also that of President Taft, whose
personality is one of the most pleas
ing that I have ever come into contact
with.”
“To my mind,” continued Goveri
nor Brown, “we can attribute thd
Democratic victories to the tariff.
The people have become convinced oiJ
the fact that the increased cost oi|
living and other expensive conditions
have been largely due to the tariff and
they have risen in rebellion and as-*
serted themselves against such heavjf
burdens. It means a great political
awakening for the country.”
“I regret that we lost Tennessee td
the Republican forces. However, the
loss cannot be attributed to any,
sources or conditions other than thosd
which were purely local in their na<
ture. It was an organized fight
against Pattersonism to which the
people had become antagonized.
t
Atlanta. —That $15,000 for the Georf
gia School of Technology is raisedl
With $14,000 in hand the Georgia Rail*
way & Electric company came to th j
front with a subscription of $1,000;
and the fund was complete. The fund
of $15,000 was necessitated by reason
of the fact that the Georgia legisla
ture recently appropriated $35,000 foi
a new shop building on the campus at
the Tech, provided the friends of the
institution should raise $15,000, thq
sum of $50,000 being necessary to
erect the building.
ALMOST A MIRACLE.
Health Completely Restored After
Case Was Pronounced Incurable.
Mrs. J. Tilghman Wright, 519 Goids
borough St.. Easton, Md., says: “I
cannot begin to describe my suffering
from Bright’s disease. I constantly
tfelt as if I were dy
ing. My back pained
me intensely and
was so weak that
for weeks I could
not walk across the
floor. My condition
became critical and
physicians pronoun
ced me incurable.
_ I started taking
V " Doan’s Kidney Pills
' as a last resort and
soon received relief. When I began
with them I weighed only 64 pounds.
I now weigh 109 pounds and feel like
a new woman.”
Remember the name—Doan's.
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
An Exciting Town.
Los Angeles is a truly exciting town
to live In. To say nothing of its
heavenly climate and Its bombs, there
is always something stimulating in
the occult line going on. Just the
other day a widow of the angelic city
began to long for a sight of one of
her schoolmates whom she had not
seen for 45 years. The longing brought
its fulfillment. A spirit told her to
look for him in Brooklyn. She obeyed,
met him on the street a few hours
after she arrived, and promptly mar
ried him. It is worth while to live
in a city where things like this hap
pen, even at the risk of being blown
up now and then.
WANTED ’EM BACK.
i ... iDiin.
—-
The Barber —Some hair restorer,
sir?
Man in Chair-Yes, if it’ll restore
the hairs you’ve just rubbed off.
PUTS STOMACHS IN ORDER.
No Indigestion, Gas, Sourness or Dys
pepsia Five Minutes After Taking
a Little Diapepsin.
There should not be a case of indiges
tion, dyspepsia or gastritis here if read
ers who are subject to Stomach trou
ble knew the tremendous anti-ferment
and digestive virtue contained In Dia
pepsin. This harmless preparation
will digest a heavy meal without
the slightest fuss or discomfort, and
relieve the sourest, acid stomach in
five minutes, besides overcoming all
foul, nauseous odors from the breath.
If your stomach Is sour and full of
gas, or your food doesn’t digest, and
your meal don’t seem to fit, why not
get a 50-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin
from any druggist here in town, and
make life worth living. Absolute re
lief from Stomach misery and perfect
Sigestion of anything you eat is sure
to follow five minutes after, and be
sides, one fifty-cent case is sufficient
to cure a whole family of such trouble.
Surely, a harmless, inexpensive
preparation like Pape’s Diapepsin,
which will always either at daytime
pr during night, relieve your sick,
sour, gassy, upset stomach and digest
your meals, is about as handy and val
uable a thing as you could have- in the
touse.
What’s in a Name?
"See here, waiter,” said Mr. Grouch,
scowling deeply over his plate, “I or
dered turtle soup. There not even
a morsel of turtle flavor in this.”
“Of course not, sir,” returned the
waiter. "What do you expect? Shake
speare said there was nothing in a
name. If you ordered college pudding
would you expect a college In It? In
Manchester pudding would you look
for a ship canal or a cotton exchange?
Any tea, sir!”—Tit-Bits.
Stiff neck! Doesn’t amount to much,
but mighty disagreeable. You’ve no idea
how quicldy a little Hamlins Wizard Oil
will lubricate the cords and make you
comfortable age 1 '
The Limit.
"John, I want to buy some gloves—
will you give me a check?”
“Sure —how much can you do with?”
“How much have you got In the
bank?”
For HEADACHE—Hicks’ C4PCDINE
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Capudlne will relieve you.
rt’a liquid —pleasant to take —acts immedi
ately. Try it. 10c., 25c.. and 50 cents at drug:
stores.
Many a fellow does all his betting
with his mouth.
You Look Prematurely Old
Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use “LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER. PRICE, SI.OO, retail.
ENCOURAGEMENT.
First Boy—Mother says if I go
swimming she’ll lick me when I get
back.
Second Boy (encouragingly)—But
perhaps you won’t get hack; there’s
been lots of fellows drowned in that
swimming hole.
BABY WASTED TO SKELETON
"My little son, when about a year
and a half old, began to have sores
come out on his face. I had a physi
cian treat him, but the sores grew
worse. Then they began to come out
on his arms, then on other parts of
his body, and then one came on his
chest, worse than the others. Then I
called another physician. Still he
grew worse. At the end of about a
year and a half of suffering he grew
so bad that I had to tie his hands in
cloths at night to keep him from
scratching the sores and tearing the
flesh. He got to lie a mere skeleton,
and was hardly able to walk.
“My aunt advised me to try Cuti
cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. I
sent to a drug store and got a cake of
Cuticura Soap and a box of the Oint
ment and followed directions. At the
end of two months the sores were all
well. He has never had any sores
of any kind since. I can sincerely say
that only for Cuticura my child would
have died. I used only one cake of
Cuticura Soap and about three boxes
of Ointment.
"I am a nurse and my profession
brings me into many different fam
ilies and it is always a pleasure for
me to tell my story and recommend
Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. Egbert Shel
don, Litchfield, Conn., Oct. 23, 1909.”
Somewhat Indignant.
The two extra specialists had pound
ed and sounded him, and felt of his
pulse and tapped his frame till he
could only lie in a cold perspiration of
fear.
“Undoubtedly it’s a case of appen
dicitis!” said specialist No. 1, grave
ly.
“Undoubtedly!” assented specialist
No. 2.
"But would he be able to stand an
operation?” pondered No. 1.
“Ah. would he?” echoed No. 2.
They dug him in the ribs again, and
he squealed.
"Ah,” remarked No. 1, “I think we
ought to let him get a bit stronger be
fore we cut into him.”
"Confound your palaver!” gasped
the patient, starting up. "What do
you take me for —a cheese?”
Pie.
“You Americans,” said the London
man, “are very fond of what you call
pie. But properly speaking a pie
should have meat In it.”
"Perhaps. But the beef packers
compel us to economize.”
TO IJKIVK OUT MALA HI A
AND HUILD UP THE SYSTEM
Tako tho Old Btandard GHOVK’B TAoTKLESSi
CIiIJLL TONIC. You know what you are * k!n„\
The formula Is plainly printed on every ••■Ule,
BhowinK It Is Mainly Ouinino and Iron In a aste
less form. The Oulnine drives out the malaria
and tno Iron hullas up the system. Bold by all
dealers for 30 years. Price 60 cents.
A stubborn desire to get even has
brought about man a man’s down
fall.
Faint ?
Have you weak heart, dizzy feelings, oppressed
vj fw< ■>breathing after meals? Or do you experience pain
/jragi/j: over the heart, shortness of breath on going up-stairs
f 1 anc * t^)e man y distressing symptoms which indicato
i P°°r circulation and bad blood? A heart tonic,
blood a °d body-builder that haa stood the teat of
vQ)over 40 years of cures is
D r * Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
1 The heart becomes regular as clock-work. The red
isHY’Sfif \ blood corpuscles are increased in number—and the
V nerves in turn are well fed. The arteries are filled
\ with good rich blood. That is why nervous debility,
\ irritability, fainting spells, disappear and are over
■@lll \ come by this alterative extract of medicinal roots
• » P ut U P by Dr. Pierce without the use of alcohol.
- Ask your neighbor. Many have been cured of
scrofulous conditions, ulcers, “fever-sores,” white swellings, etc., by taking
Dr. Pierce’s Discovery. Just the refreshing and vitalizing tonic needed for
excessive tissue waste, io convalescence from fever* or for run-down, anaemic,
thin-blooded people. Stick to this safe and sane remedy and refuse all ‘‘just
as good ” kinds offered by the dealer who is looking for a larger profit. Noth
ing will do you half as much good as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Calor more goods brighter and lister colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. Tfiey dye In cold water better than any other dya.
You tan dye any garment without ripping apart. Writ# lor Iroo booklot- How to Dye. Bleach and MU Color*. MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, If/ino/*,
The man who deceives himself is an
easy mark for others.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing- Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.
A girl is worth all it costs to raise
her—and it always costs It.
HoW€r
atHL
cfoindL?
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound? We can
furnish positive proof that it has made many remarkable
cures after all other means had failed.
Women who are suffering with some form of female
illness should consider this.
As such evidence read these two unsolicited testimonial
letters. We guarantee they are genuine and honest state
ments of facts.
Cresson, Pa.—“ Five years ago I had a had fall, and hurt
myself inwardly. I was under a doctor’s care for nine weeks,
and when I stopped I grew worse again. I sent for a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, took it as directed,
and now lam a stout, hearty woman.” Mrs. Ella E. Aikey,
Cresson, Pa.
Baird, Wash. —“A year ago I was sick with kidney an<i
bladder troubles and female weakness. The doctors gave mo
up. All they could do was to just let me go as easily as possible.
I was advised by friends to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable!
Compound and Blood Purifier. I am completely cured of my
itis, and I am nearly sixty years old.”—Mrs. Sarah Leighton*
Baird, Wash.
Evidence like the above is abundant showing that the
derangements of the female organism which breed all kinds
of miserable feelings and which ordinary practice does not
cure, are the very disorders that give way to Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Women who are afflicted with similar troubles, after
reading two such letters as the above, should be encouraged
to try this wonderfully helpful remedy.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for /, >
female ills. No sick woman does justice to W[ y
herself who will not try this famous medicine. 7 / \
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and - J 11
has thousands of cures to its credit. 11 l ¥ I
BisMHgUB Mrs. Pinkltam invites all sick women LA 9}
Bto write her for advice. She has \\|it
guided thousands to health free of charge.
Address Mxs« Pinkhniii, JLyini,
J Household Lubricant
ll THE ALL-AROUND OIL,
IN THE HANDY, EVER-READY TIN OILER •
ffkgggaigi? Is specially selected for any need In the
mm home. Saves tools from rusting. Can can
not break. Does not gum or become rancid.
MANUFACTURED BY FOR SALE BY
r~T777 Standard Oil Company STANDARD OIL COMPANY
uaatsrs tverywnrs (Incorporated: (Incorporated)
irif COLT DISTEMPER
be handled very easily. The sick are cured, and all others ll*.
wag same stable, no matter how “exposed,” kept from having the die
by using HPOKN’S LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE, (live cm
‘.rclPy\Die tongue,or In feed. Acte on the blood and expels germs cat
’ fMBro/ all fonnsof distemper. Best remedy ever known for mares 111 fcoL
, One bottle guaranteed to cure one case. fiOcaiu'll a bottle; to and
■dpWMwTffliMmPTTf ;&***ft/ Hb dozen of drugging and barnese d»vnlers. or sent express paid w
Bm&xryV&nKi-i IK- I manufacturers. Cut shows h«>w to poultice throate. Our freft
I Booklet gl wsevervtlilng. agents wanted. l.urueat redtn*
horse remedy in existence—twelve years.
6POHN MEDICAL CO., diealßUami Bacteriologists, Goshen, lncf», U. g. A*
fThe Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price*
There are lamps that cost more, but there I s no better lamp made at an*
price, (instructed of solid brass; nickel plated—easily kept clean-art*
ornament to any room In any house. There 1 s nothing known to fch« ati
of amp-making that can add to tho value of the RAYO I.amp as a light* ’
giving device. Every dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write tat
descriptive circular to the nearest agency of tho
STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated)
Kill A A axle GREASE
UrnMffl ill Pi ifflvsk Keeps the spindle bright and
Hlil jH |H H free from grit. Try a box.
ffi Ufa jUg §|l SB Sold by dealers everywhere.
8 f| I VMP iffiSTANDAND OIL CO,
m ml. ■*» fix coruorntedJ
"PLAIN TALKS ON FLORIDA”
By I. I. Moody, one of the State’s early
settlers. From these talks you will learn
many important things about Florida
and Florida lands—facts for you to re
member when you invest. They are free
—write for them.
BUNNELL DEVELOPMENT CO., Bunnell, Florid*
A ROOSEVELT’S GREAT BOOK
e “African Game Trails**
T wßXatSw Needed—a man In every y'at&t
A wdj Jr to sell tnis famous neir ow.^£»
a MfcaA. Bring it to the famine® t*
Tta-Tx y° ur locality. We givt> y©4
monopoly of field and Mgfe
F' tor i Wflr K commission. Take this g>rea&
rkv -Si/// chance. Writeforprn*pe«ti2J^
V ' Charles Scribner's Sons
j N 153 (R. S.) Fifth Yw&
NEW MADRID SEED CORK
Specially selected, extra clean and pure. Botfe
white and yellow. Put up in even weiget sack**
Car Lots a Specialty.
Jaspar Newsurn & Co., New Madrid, Mow
W. N. U., ATLANTA. NO. 47-1910.