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>U THE HOUSEWIFE
tlot Water Hint*.
tie best toilet preparation in the
I is plaiu hot water. Here aro
ie|of the uses to which it may be
rilk a bo\v] of it every night if you
»tl a good digestion, a good sleep
4 clear complexion,
utj a bag of it to your feet when
have a cold, to your back when
Hive a backache or at the nape of
r lieck when you have a headache
tee) sleepless.
nfl e the eyes with it when they are
ill] ed.
■ feet in it before manicur-
I w
cßn flic face with it once a week
yiur complexion.
ith' the cheeks in it when you
[Ahem to be rosy.
Utlo cold sores, fever blisters and
pits in very hot water in order to
tSICin up.
kela patent medicine, a single dose
“hht water bag” will cure tooih
i, leuralgia, rheumatism and pain
illlinds. Try a free sample from
fajnily teakettle.
Bennty Hint*.
onJkion powdered oatmeal that can
ootmffit at the grocer’s is as good as
thing for softening water,
riniing milk twice a day will give
cdjnplexion a creamy tint. If the
B warmed it will increase the
iidly.
nee of olive oil, the same of
of cantharldes and five ounces
m will cure almost any case
uff.
ge will reduce a double chin
inn any other treatment. Mas-
B flhs out hollows and removes su-
Buons flesh because It equalizes the
ulation.
"'lifter washing the hair let it hang
'in the back for a few hours at least,
is afbad plan to wash it at night, as
#ping jiacks the hair together tightly
• soon after the shampoo.
Renovating: Furniture.
' Tb remove spots from fur
; ture hold a redhot stove lid or poker
" er them and they will disappear.
‘ > remove spots from furniture of all
nds Without injuring the color dis
' bre one ounce of castile soap in two
larts of soft water, add four ounces
f aqua ammonia, one ounce of glyc
n. Apply with a soft sponge and
hi fweet oil will remove finger
’ irks ■from varnished and kerosene
,nm oiled furniture. Oiled and var
ied woods should be simply wiped
th a flannel cloth wrung out of
ami, soft -water. Dull, soiled woori
’ »rk may be cleaned with oil and tur
Itlanta School of Medicine.
Box 257, Atlanta, p Ga. _
college in’this section} of the South. Dignified institution
f liffr Clinical advantages most excellent. Unusual facilities for
nsSft&l labitory work in pathology and dissecting. Equipment new and eom
leA Faculty of 35 educated physicians experienced in professional teaching,
cur cSurses required for graduation. Largest medical college building between
i limore and New Orleans will be finished by September 15. Write for cata-
Iryant Grocery Company.
Buy your Fancy and Staple Grocery from the
Bryarp. Grocery Co.
till line of FresH Groceries on Hand
t all times, Delivered Promptly.
Phone 73. Phone 73.
> eed Your Business
AND DESIRE TO PLEASE YOU
FRESH, FANC 1 ! AND STAPLE
GROCERIES
PROMPT DELIVERY, Phone 52.
If you are Pleased Tell Others. If You Are Displeased Tell Me.
A. Overstreet.
PEDERSON, THOMAS GRIFx iN, ELIAS I.OTT Sr.
Pses. Cashier. Vice. Pres.
■eterson Banking Company.
( Not Incorporated )
CAPJTAL ===== $30,000.
/ery our customers consistent with proper
Banking principles
ccounts of individuals, firms]rand incorpation
Solicited
louglas ----- Georgia.
Subscribe for the Douglas Enter
i
(ise and >Semi=Weekly News 12
onths sl.rO.
\ Ji’ratrhliie Post For noita.
Ti e following plan is practiced by a
successful hog raiser who markets his
animals in Baltimore, says American
Cultivator: Riant a hickory post four
inches in diameter In the hog run. Coil
a manilla rope around this post as high
as a hog stands and staple it securely.
Then thoroughly saturate the rope with
crude petroleum—kerosene will do, but
it is not as good—and it becomes an
ideal scratching [lost for hogs and pigs.
The animals will rub against it contin
ually, and oil is fatal to lice and mites.
If kerosene is used the saturation
should be renewed every few days.
Keep the Pl*s Cronins.
Good pigs are not grown anil fatten
ed on wind and water. Good breeding
and good feeding are so closely allied
that they must go together. One is
useless without the other. If pigs stop
growing for oue month or two months
you have lost all their feed for that
length of time. They will have been
stunted to a certain extent, and you
can never regain wbat has been lost.
A sow should never have pigs before
she is oue year old.—Farm Journal.
Core of Colts.
A tabiespoonful of linseed meal
(ground flaxseed,) mixed with the grain
ration of colts morning and night is a
profitable feed. It will keep the bowels
in good condition and make the colt
lively and glossy.
See that the floors of the stalls in
which colts are kept are dry and cov
ered with clean, dry bedding. Wet,
filthy stalls are pretty sure to cause
thrush.—Horse Breeder.
The Great Salt Lake Bridge.
The longest bridge in the world
stretches across Great Salt like. It
was constructed at an enormous cost
to save time and money. Before the
bridge was built the railroad skirted
the north end of the lake. Now it cuts
off forty-three miles of road and runs
directly from Ogden to Lucin. The
cost of this remarkable bridge was
$5,000,000. The piles were brought
from the Oregon and Texas forests.
By placing all the piles together they
would measure nearly 000,000 feet
There are more than eleven miles of
permanent treslling, nearly the entire
length being under water, which is
from thirty to thirty-four feet deep.
Citation.
H. Stein has applied for exemption
of personality and setting apart and
valuation of homestead, and I will pass
upon the same at 10 o’clock a. m. on
the 7th day of January 1907, at my
office.
W. P. WahD,
i Ordinary.
JUDGE SPEER WAS REVERSED.
U, S. Caurt of Appeals Gives De
cision to Colqnitt Citizens.
Judge R. L. Shipp has been in
formed by the clerk of the Unit
ed States Circuit Court of Ap
peals at New Orleans that the
decision of Judge Speer in the
case of Ashburn vs. the Misses
Graves was reversed and that in
the case against Crawford the
decision of the lower court was
affirmed. In both instances the
decisions were favorable to the
parties of this county.
There is somethiug like four
thousand dollars involved in the
former case besides the court
cost which is about seven hun
dred dollars and will have to be
paid by the Misses Graves. The
Crawford case is a large one, j
there being something like ten
thousand dollars involved.
The suits were over lots of
land 351 and 383 of this county,
and involved the titles to the
places. The Misses Graves of:
Courtland, New York, claimed j
the land through their father
Nathan Graves while Ashburn
and Crawford held the land and
cut the timber on deeds that
came from Cyrus Graves, their
grand father through his ad
ministrator.
The cases came before Judge
Speer in Savannah and he threw
the Crawford case out of the
equity side of the court and di
rected that it be brought on the
law side and tried by jury.
He gave a verdict against Ash
burn and in favor of the Graves
sisters. The cases have been in
court several years. —Moultrie
Observer,
The Girl Who Isn’t Engaged.
Don’t be aggressive about it
and insist that you never yet
met a man you would dream of
marrying, says the Washington
Star. Even if this is true, your
vigorous assertion will leave the
opposite impression on the minds
of your hearers.
Don’t on the other hand, mag
nify some childish sweethearting
into an early “affair” which
holds you true to its memory.
And don’t above all things in
vent a suspiciously ideal lover
who has gone abroad.
Don’t belittle your present
male acquaintances by building
day dreams with a personifiction
of all the virtues as hero.
Don’t drop vague hints about
a secret engagement which time
alone will divulge.
Don’t pretend that you think
married life a bore: no one will
believe you, says Woman’s Life.
Don’t pretend you don’t be
lieve in love; no one will believe
this either.
Don’t remark that since many
marriages are unhappy, you
don’t care to risk such a step.
Such reasons are worse than
none.
She Lived in Three Generations.
Moultrie, Ga., Jan. 28.—Mrs.
Margaret Price, who was probab
ly the oldest woman in the state,
died at her home near Horlcan in
this county Friday morning and
was buried at Old Kimball church
Friday afternoon.
There was no definite record
of the age of Mrs. Price, but
perfectly reliable investigation
of her age in recent years estab
lishes the fact that she was not
less than 107 or more than 110
years old. She was the widow
of Willis Price, who was a veter
an of the Seminole Indian war
and was killed in the civil war.
She was born in Madison county,
Florida, but had lived in this
county for 70 year, and was among
the first settlers of what was a
pine wilderness.
Mrs. Price lived in three cen- j
turies, having been born in the
eighteenth century lived through
the nineteenth and into the twen
tieth century. She lived to see
her only son die of old age. She
was a woman of remarkable vi
tality and energy, and until she
was 100 years old did her own
work, superintended her farm
and looked after her herd of cat
tle. Her eyesight and hearing
remained good until the last, and
her memory was never clouded
in the least.
BRUNSWICK WIDE OPEN PORT
Bright Future for the City by the
Sad Sea Waves.
The statement of President
Jas. J. Hill, of the Great North
ern Railway System, that we
need more point of export in this
country is a true and timely sug
gestion. While we have greatly
increased our home consumption
of agricultural and manufactured
products, it is the enormous in
crease of our export trade that has
caused the congestion of traffic
in these recent times on all the
trunk lines of coastward trans
portation.
The Eastern ports are over
loaded, and their limited and
monopolized terminal facilities
are insufficient for handing the
tremendous volume of export
commodities that is offered to
them. The available Southern
ports are almost in the like case,
and their congested conditions
will grow worse as the trade of
the South and West with Europe
and the Gulf and Caribbean ter
minals of the Mexican railways
and the Panama Canal begins to
swell in proportions, as it will
do in a very few years more.
This question of new points of
export is one that ought to in
terest the people and the railway
managers in Georgia. Our
greatest port, Savannah, has al
ready reached the point of inade
! quacy to handle all the traffic
that is offered to her. During
recent months the order was
sent out from her ocean terminal
controllers to send no more
freight to Savannah until futher
: orders.
But there is the port of Brun
swick, for which an appropria
tion of $1,000,000 is asked from
Congress, so that the channel
may be deepened sufficiently to
allow the continuous incoming
and outgoing of the largest ocean
! freighters. The harbor at Brun
swick is capable of being made
one of the best and safest on the
Atlantic seaboard, and all the
people of Georgia and especially
the people of the city of Atlanta,
ought to be actively interested
in seeing that our delegation in
Congress shall support the needs
so that port with the utmost dili
gence and insistence.
Atlanta will, in a few days, be
directly connected with Brun
swick by a new line of railway
that is wholly under the control
of gentlemen who live with us
and who are devotedly concerned
in the welfare and progress of
this city. The success of the
great enterprise which Hon.
Harry Atkinson conceived and,
with the co-operation of his col
leagues, has executed, will de
pend largely upon the perfecting
of the port of Brunswick. This
commercial and manufacturing
community cannot afford to be
indifferent to the demands of a
port so admirably located with
reference to all of our present
and possible ocean-going inter
ests.
It will be no more than a wise
insurance of our future prosperi
ty for every one of our leading
business men to write an early
letter to our senators and re
presentatives in Congress and
urge them to advance by all
means at their command the full
improvement of the port of
Brunswick.—Atlanta Evening
News.
The agricultural schools w’hich
are to be erected in various parts
of the state will cost ‘approx
imately between $42,000 and $65,-
000 each if the bids submitted by
contractors are any indications.
As yet the contracts have not
been let and probadly will not be
until the trustees have had arv
other opportunity to discuss the
situation. Trustees of nine of the
eleven schools which are to be
established held a meeting at the
state capitol last week. Except
to look over the bids the executive
committee took no action.
Those who walk; by faith are
never alone.
Straight voting often makes
crooked politics.
WE ARE READY
TO FILL YOUR
MAIL ORDERS
FOR
Mens, and Childrens
Fall and Winter Clothing, Hats
Arid Furnishings.
we Garry tverthingßeadu to wear.
Two’ or more styles’of?any garments will be sent on approval fer
Selection. ®Write for Samples and Prices,
B. H. LEVY, BRO. & CO.,
SA VANNAH , GA.
[X TAKE THIS ROAD Mfj
tTake Brewer’s Lung R.e- y'jjgpjgl'
storer for Coughs, Colds or
Bronchitis. It will cure these dis
eases, and do it quickly. It’s guar
anteed. It contains no morphines
or other injurious drugs, butmany U2E2525. I
elements used in the tight against
consumption, and is a
food for the lungs.
At all druggist 50c and $1 ■
Lamar. Taylor & Riley M
Drug Co.
TO DELICATE WOMEN
You will r.ever get well and strong, bright, hap
py, hearty and free from pain, until you build up your
constitution with a nerve refreshing, blood-making
tonic, like
It Makes Pale Cheeks Pink
It is a pure, harmless, medicinal tonic, made from vegetable
Ingredients, which relieve female pain and distress, such as headache,
backache, bowel ache, dizziness, chills, scanty or profuse menstru
ation, dragging down pains, etc.
It is a building, strength-making medicine for women, the only
medicine that is certain to do you good. Try it.
Sold by every druggest in SI.OO bottles.
WRITE US A LETTER
freely and frankly, in strictest confid
ence, telling us all your symptoms and
troubles. We will send free advice
(in plain seaiea envelope), how to
cure them. Ado ess: Ladies’ Advisory
Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
jm A A A m Al |k w/^
Send your Job Work to this Office,
“YOU ARK FRIENDS
of mine,” writes Mrs. F. L. Jones, of
Gallatin, Tenn.:
“For since taking Cardui I have
gained 35 lbs., and am in better health
than for the past 9 years, i tell my
husband that Cardui is worth its
weight in gold to all suffering ladies.”