Newspaper Page Text
Tarnish on silvrrwaric.
To prevent articles of silverware
from tarnishing, warm them when
well cleaned and paint them
with a thin solution of collodion in
nloohol. using a wide, soft brush for
the purpose. Articles so treated must
be wiped only with dry cloths.
Taylor's Cherokee Itemedy of Hweel Oum
end Mullen Is Nature's great (ViasiiiBtitlon.and f-niedy < urea
Coughs, Cold*. Croup and rlruggli-to,
all throat nud long troubles. At
26c., 60c. Hint 81.00 per bottle.
“Your wife would like tq find n ton
of coal In lnr nthclfTnt; j l» 'arq adver-
tisement of a Phlfadelphla coal deal-
cr. It is not clear whether tills Is a
reflection on the s^ze of the vU??'.*
Blocking or tlm'imO'.ifit'oI coal th*
dealer gives for a ton.
jj mm jj lL f
f %tl
/ j I
I
•\T; •c
imwe y
■Another club woman, Mrs.
Haule, of Edgerton, Wis., tells
how she was cured of irregulari¬
ties and uterine trouble, terrible
pains and backache, by the use
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetabfe
Compound.
“Dicab Mbs. ITnkiiam: — A while
ego my health began to fail because of
female troubles. Tbe doctor did not I
help me. 1 remembered that IMnkhnm'a tnv mother
had used Lydia E. i
Vegetable Compound on and mauy oe- j
ensions for irregularities utorine
troubles, and I felt sure that it could
not, harm me at any rate to give it •
trial.
“ 1 was eertainly (find to find that
within a week I felt much better, tbe
terrible pnins in tbe bnelt end side
were beginning to cense, and nt tiie
time of menstruation I did not have
nearly ns serious a time ns heretofore,
so I continued its use for two inontlts,
nnd nt tbe end of that time I was like
n new woman. I really have never bud
felt better in iny life, have not n
sick headache since, nnd weigh 20
pounds more than 1 ever did. so 1 un¬
hesitatingly recommend your medi¬
cine."— Mbs. Mat lUuue, Edgerton,
Wis., Pres. Household KconomicsClub.
— 4*POO fnrftlt If original of about litter prouing
genulnenen ran not be financed-
DYSPEPSIA
•4*0®- HEADACHE, oo
,
CONSTIPATION
it
PROMPTLY AND PERMANENTLY
CURED WITH
Crab Orchard Water I
A Century's Experience, With Snoaoutul
Keen li.*. Is t lie Jlest Teltlmfintat
scii.ri by am. imuanisrs. ■
V *
'*
Crab Orchard Water Co.,
LouIavHIc, Ky.
Avery & Company
Ht'l'OFSsOftS TO
AVRRY & McMIU.AN,
B!-fva South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
—ALL KINDS OF— *
MACHINERY
m
Reliable Frick Engine*. Boiler*, all
Stres, Wheat Separator*.
_____
BEST IM!’K0\E® SAW MILL ON EAR IH.
Large Engine* and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Teeth.Patent* Mills, Corn Millq Dog’*, 1
Circular 8aw*.6aw
Steam Governor*. Full line angina* 4 .
Mill Supplies. Send for free Catilqoue, * ^
«• - • p-
Piedmont Barb Wire
No. 14 wire, tt ttli txii 1-oint'ttaxt.s,Thre*
Indie* Apart The Burba are Half „• i,..„x-
ttve ns < nmnmn Bart, wire,*u*t Do,-«
t'ui Your Stock all to i'lM-n
the 1 Bide, n, not by tbe pound r " ! * on A''-»jvU«»oMhj We will prepay
frt t to any railroad station in lieorgu. Aiv
l*am* S South C*rolin*. *• 41 S.M per mile
(Kf.vnox Tajs nr&'fi 1
AMdtRSOS HAR0WARI CO., AHunU. 6a*
BoMor«BllndHors*$L?/ B &°r5M
•on Etas. Horry Co. lows City, lo.,ki*s a suit curt
PISO'S COgE FOR
m LUntc) mm ALL t.L 5 t I AILS.
Bast bo tough Syrup. Tiusie*, Goad. Use
An urne. Soldi hr drumms*
m *1
ILVlH'
J
LASTINC RELIEF.
I *. J. W. Walls, Super¬
intendent of Streets
j of Lebanon, Ky.,
says;
“My nightly rest was broken, owing
to Irregular action of tbe kidneys. I
ivns suffering Intensely from severe
(.niim |n the small of my back and
through the kidneys nnd annoyed by
pnInful passages of abnormal seere-
tious. No amount of doctoring relieved
tills condition. I took Doan's Kidney
Pljls and experienced quick and lasting
relief. Doan's Kidney Fills will prove j
a blessing to nil sufferers from kidney |
disorders who will give them a fair !
trial."
Foster-Milbnrn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.,
proprietors. For sale by all druggists,
price 50 cents per box.
Itflllroa<lliif? 1» Japan.
Japan lias 4280 miles of railway, or
which 210 utiles were constructed in
F.XW. The number of passengers car¬
ried 011 these railways lu 1903 was
110,000,000, the freight transported
was 10,122,071 metric tons nnd the
cash* receipts amounted to about $23,-
800,000.
lie ware of OlntmsnU For CitafPli Tltit
Contain Mercury,
nemeroury will surely dewroy th« sense >'
smell andooajpletoly derange the whole syi-
tom when entering it through tho muooH
surfaces. Huehartlelosshould never be use t
cioept on praioripMoai from reputable phy¬ fold
sicians, as thodstnego they will do Is ton
to the good you cm possibly derive from
them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufacture 1
by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O., contains
no mercury, and is taken Internally, aotliif
directly upon the blood aud mucoussnrfaces
of tliesystern. In buying Hall's Caturrh Cure
be auro you get tho genuine, it Is taken In¬
ternally, anil made In Toledo, Ohio, tiy K.
j. Cheney A Co. Tostlmoulata 75c. free. bottle.
Bold by Liruggistw; price, I'llis for constipation per
Take Hull's Family
tlerui Day,
The State of Flab Im* established
a holiday In honor of germs. It is
called General Ileiiltli Day an* i* the
first Monday in October, on this day
all theatres, churches, public halls,
hotels, hoarding houses, etc., must be
thoroughly dlslufijpted.
A Well ila.erved Tribute,
Tbe awarding of the Grand Prize to the
Winchester Repeating Arms Co.. New Ha¬
ven Conn., at the St. Louis the Exposition, highest
confer* upon tins company
mark of diatinction attained by any manic
failure!' of guns or ammunition in the
would. - Although 11 great number of med¬
als were given, the only award of a Grand
Prize was to the Winchester competition Repeating
Arms Co ;, gjvep aa it was in
j with the leading manufacturers decidedly the of superior¬ all conn*
tries, it lo-tilies to and
ity of Winchester j-iflts, shotgun* attained by am¬ the
munition. Tiie success
Winchester ltepeating Arms Co. at this
exposition is in line with past honors. At
the Pans Exposition they received the
Grand l'i'.x. and wherever exhibited have
always been giyen the highest possible
1 prize*. This latest recognition of thirty of super¬
iority is the natural result year*
of careful and successful endeavor in main-
tabling the high quality of Winchester
rides, allot gnus and ammunition.
------ --—
jVvljrtf the Kaiser tlruve through Hanir-
liii recently hundreds of children stood
Along the route, dressed either ss rats or
in the pictureufjue costume of the famous
TiperV' period
A Long Train.
Confide, Ga., Jan. 3,—The Atlantic
Birmingham railroad ran Saturday.
what was probably (lie longest train of
cars even seen in Georgia, operated
by a single engine. The train was
made up o'f,.)»)ie hundred and two
cars, loads Slid empties, and was
drawn to Fitzgerald from Brunswick,
at a good rate of speed by one of the
company's new monstrer locomotives.
The train was brken up at Fitzger¬
ald, where seve)-al branches of the
toad diverge, after the officials of Ihe
road were thoroughly satisfied that
the big engines would do all that was
claimed for them by the manufactur-
P| ;S' The Irain was nearly a mile and
; a quarter long, including the engine
I nnd caboose. Macon Telegraph.
4.'.-'- Simpsonian Echo.
A
A number of politicians at Demo¬
cratic headquarters were discussing
before election the bucolic ignorauce
displayed by newly elected Congrpss-
men from tho Interior.
"About the worst instance that ever
came within my personal knowledge,”
said Chairman Taggart, "was thm at-
fortled by the Hon. Jerry Simpson, the
chap that for awhile wag known as
'Sockless’ Simpson. Well, when Jerry
first came to Congress he observed
that h* was not entirety familiar with
the McKinley bill. He proposed, how-
ever, to examine into the matter, and
if he considered it Just "ne would vote
that ll be paid! "—Harper's Weekly.
MIGHT HAVE SAVED IT*
A Lot of TroubU Ff iin Too Much Staruh
Food*
1 A little boy nf eight years whose
paVduts dffi not feed hint on the right
I ki»id of jtocKt-.unf* always nervous nnd the
suffered from a weak condition of
J stomach amt bowels. Finally lie was
taken down-^vith pp|ieudteit|s and after
intestinal Oi^Mtion digestion the-tlqetpr. kfioxvlng weak. that
bis was very
put iUu^oxi rapidly Grape Nuts twice a day.
He recovered and about two
, °!lUis. thereafter, Ids Father states,
■ "* lp has grown to be strong, muscular,
*vndVsleeps sohrmlly; weighs ti2 pounds,
Tt** 1 his whole.jj jitnn is in a tine con-
dtttou of healtb." Nsnte given by
Postuui Co'..' Bn trie Creek, Mich,
r ft is plain that if lie had beeti put on
j Grape-Nuts at an earlier period in Ids
life, l*fipt.. from the use of foods
be 7 'could not digest, be never
j '.disease. would have ip iaused bud appendicitis. by undigested That food
1
' 'dccsVtiig itj the stomach and bowels.
eausin'g' Irritation and making for the
giowth of ail kinds of microbes, setting
up a diseased‘condition which is the
j active cause of appendicitis, and this
is mol ° marked .... with peopl- , who do not
property digest white breed.
Grape-Nuts is made of tbe selected
parts of wheat apcl barley -r.d by tbe
peculiar processes of tbe cooking at tbe
fag Lory, git of tbe starch is turned into
sugar ready for immediate digestion
and the more perfect nourishment of
nit parts of’the body, particularly the
brnitj Head'The and tiers e centres. book,
little "The Road to
Weilvilie, ' found In each pkg.
SOUTH’S LARGEST GAIN,
It tins Decn in Controlling
nnd Driving Out the
Whisky Truffle.
1 tom thf Natnrtfay Fvening I’oil,
.
OH a decade a remarkable
change bits been going on
F in festiillons tbe Houtb. have 'i’iie been maul- local,
mm ty but tlie results bear Hie
semblance of a great move¬
ment. After tbe war Ihe South bad
almost as many drinking places as It
bad stores. To-day more than one-half
of tbe counties below Mason and Dix-
oil's line prohibit the sale of liquor.
For Instance, almost sixly per cent, of
Texas, nearly eighty per cent, of Geor-
gla, ninety per cent, of Mississippi and
all of Tennessee except eight cities
have voted out the saloon, while even
in Kentucky thirty-seven counties are
under prohibition rule.
There Is nothing of particular pollt-
leal Importance in these fuels, but
there is in them a vast dial of social
nnd personal slguideaiice. In litem-
lure pretending to represent the life of
the So nth the mini julep llgt res as con.
spieuously as the genial sunshine or
the climbing roses, when, as a matter
ot fact, ice water or lemonade might be
more realistic. The Southern “luajah,
sail!” with some of his old manners,
still hangs on,-but the Southern mail
of to-i'ny is quite another kind of per¬
son. This nay be a less to romance,
for, even to the abstainer, there is
fragrance in tbe mention of mint which
lemonade -fails to suggest, and the
major with his large maimer and con¬
tempt for statistics fills more cf Ihe
atmosphere than thequiet,agile worker
who thinks of crops, eottoo mills an t
stock quotations Instead of the lost
cause and its battles.
But the same qualities of grit, endur.
mice, fidelity and cheerfulness which
made splendid records in war are
bravely nt work solving tbe problems
of peace, li most cases tbe liquor
question has been hnuJIod as a plain
business proposition. Tbe saloon
balked enterprise, reduced the labor
supply, increased lawlessness and kept
communitles poor; werse still, it played
havoc with the individual. In more
than four hundred counties the good
citizenship of ail parties arose and ban-
tslied it.
ltehold (lie be le.ilsl This year Ihe
South has made mere money ihar: it
has ever known, more money for spend -
rig; so much of it, in tact, that three
of flic great cities of t'.ie North have
formed special bu dness organizations
to : civir ! Southern trade, while the
cities of tbe West have luct the com-
petition by the most alluring Induce-
meals. But the larger gain is in the
general uplift of tbe population. De-
spile the occasional outbreaks of crime
-in most eases where the saloons still
exist—the whole trend of the South
Is steadily toward wise and safe con¬
servatism, and the evolution of South-
ern personality is producing broad¬
minded Americans, wt.o live clean
lives, do good work and carry no chips
on tlielr shoulders.
It has been said that had it not been
for whisky there would have been no
Civil Wa,. Hard drinking, both North
and Soule, inflamed the passions en¬
gendered b.v slavery. It follows as a
hopeful faet that in the consideration
of the rnce question, which lingers
long after tbe abolition of human bond¬
age, the work of conciliation and ad*
justir.en. J tvid bn done by men of tem¬
perate lmblts and temperate minis.
In tbe new eruditions being wrought
by the South itself there must come
higher character and achievement than
its oldest and finest chivalry could
sln;v.
HOW ANIMALS FAST.
Tim Manner in which Various Reasis
iitbernate.
A large number of species of animals
vndergo more or less prolonged anil
couti.Himm fusts during the period of
their winter or summer sleep. Dur-
lag such slumbers the more active
functions of the body are to a great
extent suspended, while those that
iire carried on act slowly and entail
comparatively little waste of tissue
anu energy.
Moreover, before (be period of tbe
winter torpor or hibernation takes
place, many animals, such ns bears,
aci'iimulnte large stores of fat on vari¬
ous parts of the body, which suffice to
supply all the waste entailed by the
respiratory function during the period
in question. Fat Is also accumulated
by tho mouse lemurs of Madagascar
previous to the summer sleep, or acti¬
vation, and is used up in a similar
manner, their summer sleeps being
.undertaken for the purpose of avoid¬
ing the season of great heat aud
drought, when food is difficult or im¬
possible to procure. like
Other species, ou the contrary,
squirrels, dormice and hamsters, lay
iqi supplies of food in their winter
quarters, on which they feed during
waking intervals in the torpor, so that
the last is by no means so prolonged
or so continuous as J a the ease of the
first group. There are. however, yet
other animals, such as bats amoug
mammals, frogs and toads among am¬
phibians, and Ibe West African lung
fish among fishes, which, apparently,
neither put on fat nor lay up a store
of food during their period of torpor,
which, in the case of all of them, is
unusually prolonged.
Bats, for instance, generally remain
torpid throughout the winter months,
while the African lung fish passes the
whole of the dry season comfortably
sealed up within a nest formed by the
raked and dry_mud of the river bed.
In all these latter cases the fast must
accordingly be prolonged and of a se
vero type.—Chicago News
They Made It Unanimous.
Three girls were exchanging eoati-
deaees cud telling each other what
sort of men they like best.
First Girl—"I like a mau with a
past. A man with a past is always in¬
teresting.''
Second Girl—"That's true; and j
don't think lie's nearly so interesting ,
as the man with a future."
Third Girl—“The uum who laio'?ft*
me is tbe man with a tu-.ci*. ".
_ BENEFIT
Ornament* Incr<*H«Ins; in Favor For Hat
nnd Hiiuil/ir orn.'iiuonts nro
more favored than seemed likely to Ik*
(lie ease nt Hie beginning of Ihe sea-
son; bnt tbe.V are only prized wbeu of
a very IirikIkoiuc sort, itliine pebbles
and finely cut steel, mounted In enam¬
eled metal and out Jei, have the lead,
l have also remarked that one or two
milliners are trying to revive a taste
for gold galops, but so far I have only
seen It applied to white or belge-eo!'
oved felts.—Millinery Trade Review.
(ireat Ileiiutlfler*.
Tlioughifuluess for others and ttn-
selfishness are great benutlHerS. For
ad perfection of skin nnd feature won't
make Up for an unlovely expression,
and such an expression can come only
from a sweet nature, says Christine
Terhune Herrick in tile Philadelphia
North American. We are not nil of
ns born with pretty faces-but we can
all of us (ry to get both, And there
Is some satisfaction in working on one's
disposition. You may not be able to
alter the shape of your nose or to make
large melting eyes out of a pair of
optics that are good for little except
seeing.. But if you cultivate an inter-
ost in those about you, if you try to
make Hie world happier for those with
whom you are brought into assoeia-
tion, you will not fail before long to
get 11 pleasing expression that will
make the physical defects be forgotten,
or to seem charms because they arc
part of a lovely and generous persou-
ulily. Try It!
And, at the same time, keep up (he
care of the body!
The Hight* of Children,
“We must interpret tbe iaws for the
protection of the young against cruelty,
[van | oppression Dyke and in Everybodys injustice,” says Magazine, Henry
. “ns evidence of Hie world's growing
sense of justice. Beginning with the
j | Collieries Factory Act Act of of 1833 18f2 nnd England, the Mines there add
in
has been a steadily increasing effort to
diminish and prevent the degradation
of the race by tbe enslavement of cbilil-
( hood to labor. Even ‘.lie parents’ right
0 f control, says the modern world,
must be held ill harmony with the
J j child’s moral right and physical. to life and growth, The law mental, itself
^ must recognize the Injustice of dealing
J with young delinquents as if they were
old and hardened criminals. No more
^ bending of children ten and twelve
j years old in the common jail! Juvenile
courts and probation officers, asylums
| nml reformatories, an intelligent and
systematic effort to reclaim the young
( ijf 0 before it has fallen into hopeless
bondage to crime; this i:? tbe spirit
„f civilized legislation to-day. In 1903
11() ],. ss than ten of the American States
! enacted special statutes with this end
j u view.”
The Uplifting Woman,
The cheering up woman is a real en¬
tity nowadays, Itogisterod on tho
books of a certain woman's exchange,
she dispenses her cheerfulness at so
much an hour, and is in great demand.
She reads to invalids, talks to them,
sings or plays to them, as the case re¬
quires. She is a bright, hustling little
body, with cheery ways and optimis¬
tic temperament.
.She will come to you for five minutes
or thirty. She will darn your stockings
or mend your clothes, She will fix
flowers in vases and make your room
homelike, or talk ta you about every¬
thing or nothing.
Personally she is just what you
! would expect such a woman to he. She
has a family of her own who rejoices
in her optimistic view of life, but she
uses her talent also to keep the wolf
from the door.
There was a time when there was
plenty in the home, but financial re-
v erses came, and with them the need
tetrenchmeut. 1 lie husband fell ill
;lmI some one must turn breadwinner,
u f” 11 the wife nnd mother,
lo-day , she is supporting her family
comfortably by acting as a cheering up
wo ™“, « Ild ll «' engagement book tes-
t,fles to th c success of the experiment
"'i' 1 the demand which exists for her
.
services.—Indianapolis News.
'ey ©
^ esa..- ( iiW s
__
There is a great fancy for trimming
tbe necks and shoulders of gowns with
hands of velvet. These velvet strip-
1 Pings go over the shoulder and over
the arm. A band of velvet also ex-
tends around the yoke.
Perfectly plaiu black patent leather
shopping bags are taking the place of
the bright colored and more showy
f sliion for a season. These are not
so large as those previously used, and
have plain gnu metal or gold clasps.
One of the latest novelties in dress
materials is a radium-colored silk. It
is pearly white, but'it is so woven (hat
it seems to give out rays faintly tinged
‘with color. Silver bullion iaee makes a
fascinating trimming for a gowu of
ibis silk.
Bargain counter lengths of siik are
boons to the mothers of growing
daughters. Young girls dress simply
nowadays, but their gowns are as often
Blade of silk as of cotton. Indeed, the
vogue of silk is universal at preseut,
and all ages appear In it.
In Paris, at all Ihe smart gatherings,
it is quickly to be noted that tbe new
empire green, a medium turquoise blue,
a leather brown, or else’the new parrot
red—a scarlet having not a trace of
pink hi It—are the very newest shades
j with white; and most effective are
I (hey iu such conjunction.
The Louis XV. coats aud also the Di-
i rectoire. that are veritable vepvoduc-
| old-looking tious of those for historic miss styles, under are sixteen rather
a
> years, blit there are many modiflea-
j tIons which adapt them to more youth-
I tel wearers. The Norfolk is ever with
•’* * s prubosSng ;l • 'bdidnte
for t'.-vpv tlii* « mi sail ever,
How to Live 100 Year*.
Sir James Sawyer, an English phy¬
sician, has formulated the following
19 rules for prolonging life to 100
years:
1. Eight Hours' Bleep.
2. Sleep on your right side.
3. Keep your bedroom window open
AN night,
4 Have a mal at your bedroom
door.
5. Do not leave your bedstead
against the wall,
6. No cold bath in .he morning, but
a bath at the tempertaurc ot the
body.
7. Exercise before breakfast.
8. Eat little meat and see that it is
well cooked.
9. (For adults.) Drink no milk.
10. Eat plenty of fat.
11. Avoid intoxicants.
12. Exercise daily in toe open air.
13. .Allow no pet animals in your
living room. They are apt to carry
about disease germs.
14. Dive in the country if you can.
15. Watch the three D’s—drinking
water, damp and drains.
10. Have a change of occupation.
17. Take frequent and short noli-
days.
18. Limit your ambitions, and
19. Keep Vour temper.—Chicago
Journal.
l!
What He Said.
A certain gushing lady took her
four-year-old daughter to a pho¬
tographer. The little one cou'd not be
made still. The camera man was as
nice and suave as he could be, called
the child all file f.weet,' endearing
names he could think of While using
•very device of gentle persuasion to
make the little wlggler keep still Fi¬
nally he turned to the despairing
mother and said— s
“Madam, if you will leave your darl¬
ing with me for a few minutes I think
I can succeed in taking her lovely face
to perfection." short
The mother withdrew for a
tltae. Soon the photographer sum¬
moned her back and exhibited a highly
satisfactory negative, When they
reached home the mother asked,—
“Nellie, what did that nice gentle¬
man say to you when I left you alone
with him?”
“Well, h* thafil," lisped Nellie. “H
you don't tbit sthill, you ugly, squint-
eyed monkey; I’ll thake the life out of
your trembling carcath.’ Then t that
very sthill, mamma!”—Waverley’f
Magazine.
Some surgeons in New York havo
Just succeeded In fitting a man With
a new stomach, made of rubber. They
must have been preparing him for
a holiday dinner, the Savannah News
comments,
FITS permanently cured. No (Us or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great
NerveEestorer,$2trial bottleand treatise free
Dr.H.H Kli se, Ltd.. 031 Arch St .. Phila., f’a.
Cavalry of the west coast of Madagascar
tide oxen.
A Guaranteed Cure For Files.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles. Druggists will refund money if I’azo
Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c.
All the soldiers in tlie army of Argen¬
tina are forced to play football.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wiDd colic, 25e.a bottle
The cost of living has doubled in Spain
in the last few years
Piso's Cure cannot be too Uighiyspokenoi Thir l
*» a cough cure.— J. W. O’Brien, 322
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan; 6.1905,
At a “smart” dinner in New York but¬
ter is not served.
BABY'S TERRIBLE SORE
.Body Raw With Humor—Caused Untold
Agony—poctor Hid No Good—Mother
Discouraged—Ctttlcura Cured at Once.
“My child was a very delicate broke baby. his J4
terrible sore and humor out on
body, looking like raw flesh, and causing
the child untold agony. My physician which pre-.
scribed various remedies, none 6t
helped at. nil. I became discouraged and
took the matter into my own hands, and
tried Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment
with almost immediate success: Before
{he second week had passed the soreness
was gone,' not leaving a trace of ally tiling.
Mrs. Jeannette H. Block, 281
Rochester, N. Y.”
The electric motor is fast displacing the
leather belt in factories.
To Core n Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure.
K. W. Grove’s signature is on box. 25c.
There are 44,000 hotels in the United
States.
Jlcli cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold by a!l
druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly filled
by Dr. K. Detehon, Crawfordsville, Ind.
One of the new sports in Eng’and is
falconry with motor cars.
At3-’05)
GOttmsumm i Solid CUT GOOO THE EACH SOUTHERN Car-toad OUT GAN; FOR THIS VALUABLE "GOOD Addrefs: MXTO CAR LUCK"BAKING CO. AND Thc Owaww ARTICLES. Ocpartmknt SAVE 8&I Wkmmowo IT. POWDER' SEE THEY Stork Va LIST ARE U-S fl or IN A.I * r! w
It's -4 P i
to Vour Interest
to use Goo3 ’Luck Baking Powder—for its quality, 1*
for its economy afld for the premiums you get by
saving the coupon on the label of. every can.
III ><© GOOD LUCK
ODL Baking Powder
Mar| is a superior article of unexcelled leavening force and' J />
Ktmn positive purity. Its sales have "reached tremendous
ONE cents proportions, per pound by, reason can ip of made which possible! the little-price ’ of ten 'M f
SPOON fi Wqts'us. Can, It's many Above Buy to articles The vour “Good if is little your interest pictured and premiuiti Luck'' grocer tells the how can't and coupon book to ,save supply get in • which every them the you. coupons, can Lee appear^ show MfiSi on s •, the every . _ v .jd p I . # t ¥
! in THE SOUTHERN MFB, CO.
1 Rlchraand, V*.
^SOUTHERN • *-
I ■ i
s<51chmond
' 1
SUFFERED FROM CATARRH OF LUNC8
SO CO MMON IN WINTER*
CURED BY PE-RU-NA.
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A PLAIN TALK
On a Plain Subject In
Plain Language.
The coming wilder will cause at least
one-half of the women to have catarrh,
colds, coughs, pneumonia or consumption.
Thousands of women will lose their lives
and tens of thousands will acquire some
chronic ailment from which
KEEP tbev will never recover.
PIRUNA Unless you take the nec¬ lie
IN THE essary precautions, that (who t
HOUSE. chances are you
read this) will be one of
the unfortunate ones. Little or no risk
need be run if Peruna is kept in the house
and at the first appearance of any symp¬
tom of catarrh taken as directed on the
bottle.
Peruna is a safeguard, a preventative, of catarrh, a
Specific, a chre for all cases
acute and chronic, coughs, colds,
tion, etc. medical advice, address Dr. 8.
For free
H. Hartman, President of The
Sanitarium. Columbus, Ohio.
tyfai/e^uicA EiiBarjaii
To better advertise tbe South’s Leading
business College, four scholarships are ot¬
tered young persons of this county at less than
cost. WRITE TODAY.
GA-iLA. BUSINESS CDLIEQE, Macau, Ga.
is necessary for cotton to produce I
high yields and good fibre.
Write for flur valuable books on
fertilization; they contain informa- .
tion that means dollars to live
' farmers. Sent free on request.
Write now while you think of it
to tbe
GERMAN KALI WORKS
New York-’ Atlanta, Ga,-—
93 Nassau St., or Q 2 *^ S °;^ road
g
4 •lllpl PiillS
■m-Y.
-7
m fell?'
r.r. -•
WANTED—In cash State, Sslesmen to ceil'
r REST FOR THE BOWELS
r fj CANDY
Mr J CATHARTIC
i
s\
Ili^^WfiiLCYOUSir^P [< * i
GUARANTEED CURE for alt bo'wel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad
blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, don’t pimples,
pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. When your bowels together. nova
regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than alt other diseases It
starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start bowels taking
CASCARETS today, for you will never get welt-and stay well until.you get your
right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee Sample to cure and or
money refunded. The genuine tablet Btamped C C C. Never sold in bulk.
booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 501 -,
s
A COLD ON THE LUNGS THREATENS
TO BECOME SERIOUS.
Pe-ru-na Brings Speedy Relief.
Mrs. H. E. Adams, ex-President Pal¬
metto Club, of New Orleans., La., write*
from 110 Garfield Court, South Bend, Ind.,
as follows;
“Jam pleased to endorse Peruna,
as I took it about a year ago anti It
soon brought me relief from a Coltl
on my In1138 icbfoh. threatened to be
serious.
"The lungs were sore and inflamed, I
coughed a couple of hours every done night, before and
I felt that something affected. must be
my lungs became suggested by , of
"Peruna was some my
friends who had used it, and found acting that upon it
1 their advice f tried it and
was ab’.e to bring about endorsement a speedy care. and
I You have my good highest did me.”
thanks for the it
Soinling the Praiies of Peruna.
Mrs. Frances Wilson, 32 Nelson St.,
Clinton, Mass., writes: ill¬
“Had you seen me nt the time of my
ness and now, you would not wonder that
1 take delight in sounding the praises of
Peruna. cold which at¬
“My ailment bronchial was a tubes severe and lungs.
tacked tbe
“ 1 followed your special directions
a ijd after using sir bottles of Peruna ,
l teas on my fort, again , 1 think
Peruna a wonderful medicine.’’
You Want the Best
COTTON GIN
MACHINERY
Ask Any Experienced Sinner Abnut
PRATT MUNGER
EAGLE
WINSHIP SMITH
We would like to show you
What Thousands of Lffe Long
Customers Say.
W 7 rite for catalogue and testi¬
monial booklet.
Continental Gin Co.
Charlotte, N. C., Atlanta, Ga,,
Birmingham, phis, Tenn., Ala., Dallas Mem¬
Texas.
CURED
Gives
Quick
Relief.
all swelling in 8 to 20
days; effects a permanent cure
in 39 to todays. Trial treatment
givenfree. Not hingcan be fairer
ipi Write Dr. H. H. Green's Son*.
_ Specialists, Box B Atlanta, Qa.