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THE CARROLL FREE PRESS. CARROLLTON, GEORGIA.
There is a Demand
for
©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©
©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©*©©©©
©
o
Arnica Salve - 25 c
Beef. Iron and Wine - $1
Blackberry Cordial and Jamaica
Ginger - - 50c
Blood .and Liver -Pills 25c
Blood Tonic Pills - 50c
Bronchial Lozenges * 15c
Bronchial Loz., Mentholated 15c
Buchu and Palmetto Com. • 50c
Carbolic Salve - 25c
Carbolized Witch RazelSalve 25c
Catarrh Cream - 25c
Catarrh Tablets with Douche 50c
Celery Compound - $1
Charcoal Lozengef - 15c
Charcoal and PepsinLozenges 20c
©©©©©©^ ©©©OOC
8 ‘-Ready-made” Remedies for the ordinary ailments
the exigencies of which do not require the ser-
JJ vices of the Family Physician, and in offering our
x customers the celebrated .
A remedy for
all kinds of fe
male weaknes-
es. An excel -
ent tonic, al
laying inflama-
lion and pain,
relieves con
gestion and
helps the ner
vous system.
One of the best
jomp o u n d s
ver prepared
L or women.
Price $1.00
o
e
s
o
o
o
o
o
o
remedies, we do so with absolute confidence. Why?
Because we know who make tbem, what they are
made of, the iugredients of each usually being,
stated on each article. These ingredients will be
found to be those on which scientific physicians
a rely. w
©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©
©
Dyspepsia Remedy
50c
©
Dyspepsia Toblets
50c
o
©
Eczema Remedy
50c
Eczema Ointment
50c
©
EyeHSalve
26c
©
Eye Tone
25c
©
Family Liniment - 25c,
50c
©
ci
Headache Wafers - 10c, 25c
Itch Ointment
25c
©
Kidney Pills
50c
©
Larkspur Lotion
25c
o
Laxative Blood Alterative -
$1
©
o
©
Laxitive Gold Breakers
25c
Little Active Liver Pills -
25c
We do not offer these remedies with the idea of substitution
or in the place of other remedies that may be called for, nor
are they expected to take the place of the family physician.
No Druggist cares to reccomend preparations, the merits of
which he knows only through the advertisements he has
seen, and which enter into the cost of the preparation.
Childrens Cough Syrup - 25c
Childrens Laxative - 25c
Chill and Fever Tonic - 25c
Cleaning Mixture - 25c
Cod Liver Oil Emulsion - $1
Compound Licorice Powder 15c
Compound Extract Sarsaparilla
- $1
Compound Laxative Fig and
Serna Syrup - 25c
Compound Syrup of Hypophos-
« phites - $1
Corn Remedy - - i5c
Corn Salve - 10c
Cramp Bark Compound $1
Diarrhea Mixture - 25c, 50c
Dynamic Tonic 50c, 75c
Dynamic Tablets - 50c
0©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©O
© The Druggist who wants to hold and increase his bus. 0
O iness has to be careful in what he reccomends and to ©
© have confidence in what he reccomends. ©
© All these requirements have been met in the ‘Penslar’ ©
© Remedies, and we unhesitately reccomend them to our 0
o customers. ©
© Call or write for interesting book about them. Buy q
0 an d use them on our reccomendation—we know you ()
y^ill be pleased. 0
©©©©©© ©©©©©©©©©
Here we have
the ideal Ton
ic. Who does
not need a
touic—one to
build up your
entire system
iu general—
especially the
nerves.
In two sizes
50 cents
und
$1.00
CHINESE PIRATES.
The Bloody Battle That Wiped Out
King Moy Sen’* Crew.
Captain George B. Boyton’s
greatest light was with old Moy .
Sen, the pirate king. The story is
told in his autobiography, lately
published: “The Chinamen rushed
over the rail at us in a sulphur
cloud. They threw themselves on
the deck as though wounded in or
der to hairstring or disembowel, so
we made sure every Chinaman was
dead when he struck the deck. It
was such a light as one gets into
only in years, perhaps only once in
a lifetime. The butchery was
dreadful, hut the excitement of it
sets one’s blood ablaze. Our men
became demons. As they shot and
slashed they shouted and sang. A
disarmed Chinkic seized mo around
the waiat and dragged me in among
hia blood stained fellows, but we
were so cloBely wedged together
that they could not chop at me
without ^friking each other, and
they nev§r thought , of stabbing me
Norton and the mighty Lorensen,
swinging an enormous Chinese
sword which he had taken from one
of his victims, came to my assist
ance, and in a twinkling I was free,
with dead and maimed pirates piled
up around me in a circle. I could
feel sword cuts now and then, but
they seemed like pin pricks. All of
us were so covered with blood that
there was no telling whether it
came from our own wounds or those
we hud inflicted.
“ ‘That makes us even,’ I shouted
to Lorensen, as I cut down a yel
low devil who had crept up behind
him while he was busy with those
in front and had his knife raised to
put him out of commission. A
Chinkic who had lost his sword
seized my empty pistol from its hol
ster, pressed it over my heart and
pulled the trigger. I let him go that
far and then laughed at him ns I
backed away and cut hia head half
olT. I saw Norton go down and
fought my way to him, to find that
he had only slipped in a red pool.
He had been singing a loud requiem
of profane abuse over those who
had met his sword, and he resumed
it where lie had left off, hardly missy
ing a note.
“We kept the pirates in front of
us and stead unforced our way for
ward. Evcfld^Bjhe one of our own
men fell ua fight thq
harder. The Chinkies cut and
flashed with all of their desperate
savagery, but it was impossible for
them to stand tefore the fury of
our men. and thdngh they outnum
bered us four or five to one they
finally began to give way. We fol
lowed them on to their own deck
and piled them up on top of each
other. Finally a lot of them took
to the hold, and the rest, perhaps a
hundred of them, jumped over
board.
“Those that foolishly fled to the
hold we treated to a dose of their
own modicine. We threw their 1
stinkpots down among them until
the air was thick with the poison-r
ous smoke and closed the hatches.
Some of them, gasping and blinded,
tried to escape through the guard
ed gangways,; the rest of them di(j*l
in the hold. There was not a pirate
left alive on the junk or on our own
deck.”
Flavored to Taste.
“It's the insects,” complained the
amateur gardener. “They destroy
all my radishes, and try as I may I
can’t exterminate them.”
“Best remedy I know,” said the
friend, “is to lay salt between the
rows. Never been known to fail.”
“Well,” said the friend when next
they met, “and did you try the salt
on those insects?”
“Yes,” replied the other, “and
the next morning the little beggars
were pulling up the radishes, dip
ping them in the salt and eating
them by the score.”—London Ideas.
S. W. Corner Square Carrollton, Ga.
Pain Dispeller
Palatable Cod Liver Oil
Pile Exit
Pine Tar Cough Balsam
Rheumatic Oil
Rheumatism Remedy
Ricinol
Snow Flower Compound
Soothing Syrup
Sore Throat Remedy
Sulphur and Cream Tartar
gers
Toothache Drops
Tooth Paste
Worm Lozengrs
Worm Syrup
Our Engines, stationary or mounted on wheels
are built for Heavy Duty,
and arc particularly well
adapted for Saw Mill, Oii
fttHI and Codon Ginnin*. If
Write for prices on Saw
Mills, Shingle Mills, etc.
BOILERS. We carry
for immediate shipment the J
best constructed Boilers,
ranging from 12 H. P. to
150H.P. Write for catalog.
We Also
Manufacture
Towers, Tasks,
Standpipes,
Seif Si
►ell Supporting
Steel Stacks,
Plate and Sheet
Iron Work.
J. S. SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO.. Macon, Ga.
THE BROKEN DOWN FOOT.
Origin of Dunning.
During the reign of Henry VIII.
(there lived in Lincoln, England, a
ifamous bailiff named Joe Dun.
(Joseph was very clever in the man-
iageroent of his business and so dex-
jtrous in annoying those who refus
ed the payment of an account with
which he had been intrusted that
“to set Dun on him” or “to Dun
Ihira” became common advice to the
owner of a bad debt. To this per-
aonage we owe what to not a few
ipeople is the most disagreeable
Iword in the language.
A Striking Mataphor.
For a “striking metaphor” take
IBydnoy Smith’s when he saw a lit-
Ulo girl stoop down and stroke the
•hell of a tnrtlo.
“Why are you doing that, Belle r
|he asked.
“To please the turtle.”
“My child, you might as well
•troko tho dome of St. Paul’s to
ipleafce tho dean and chapter."
Any Mites in Your
^sswil///. Poultry
House?
Go after them
right with
Conkey’s
Lice Liquid.
That will fix
them. It
drowns them
out in the
cracks, where they breed and thrive and
away through the day until the fowls
come back to roost at night Get into old
clothes and with a sprayer or sprinkling
can full of Conkey’s Lice Liquid, go over
the whole (dace and paint the roosts with
the same stuff. Try this. We guarantee
it effective. Conkey’s Lice Liquid 35c qt;
iOc 2 qts,; $1.00 a gallon.
Waak Ligamanta and Muaolas Cauaa
tha Arch to Collapaa.
The condition known as flat foot
is brought about by a stretching of
the ligaments and a weakening of
the supporting muscles, so that tho
foot, forced to its natural work of
standing and walking, spreads un
der the strain and the normal arch
is obliterated.
All the miserable symptoms con
nected with this trouble are due to
the fact that the machinery of the
foot has broken down and the
weight of the body is too much for
it. It follows that there will be
many degrees of flat foot and of the
suffering incident to it. Naturally
a heavy person who is obliged to be
on his feet a great many hours of
tho day will suffer more than one of
light weight who is in a position
where he can humor his feet. This
is why the foot breaks down so
often in early adult life, when most
persons take up their chosen occu
pation.
Such occupations as those of
trained nurses, policemen, waiters
and cooks will soon bring to light
any unsuspected weakness of the
foot mechanism, and in many cases
this weakness is of such a degree
that the occupation must be
changed. Many women who wish
to take up nursing and who are em
inently fitted for this work in every
other way are obliged to abandon
it for the reason that their feet re
fuse to meet the demands put upon
them.
The first Bign that the foot is giv
ing out is a sensation of weakness.
It passes off when the foot is al
lowed to rest, but soon returns
when the sufferer tries to use the
feet again. By and by the dull ache
(rill run farther and farther up the
leg; the knee will hurt, and then
the hip. The dull, constant ache
may be enlivened by a sudden
sharp, darting pain, and the patient
complains that he has gout ot
rheumatism.
If the patieut neglects treatment
and persists in overuse of the foot
he is driven to abnormal attitudes
by the effort to adjust the weight
of the body, and these unnatural at
titudes will presently result in a
permanent displacement of hones.
The treatment of flat foot con
sists of certain exercises designed
to strengthen the weak muscles and
to make passive motion of the foot
free and painless. The patient must
learn to throw the weight on the
outer aide of the foot, and to this
end a shoe with the inner border of
sole and heel a little thicker than
the outer one is often a great help.
Long continuance in one position
should be avoided, and the support
ing metal arch which the majority
of sufferers need Bhould he as accu
rately measured for and fitted as
any other surgical appliance.—
Youth’s Companion.
KEEP COOL
Maaiurifig Tim, With Water.
Under the Ptolemies the Egyp
tians measured time by the clepsy
dra, a hydraulic clock, the houra be
ing determined by the quantity of
water that escaped from a small or
ifice in the reservoir. The simplest
kind consisted of a transparent vase
filled with water, graduated and
having a small aperture in the bot
tom. As the liquid escaped its
height in the receptacle marked the
hour.
USE AN
Electric Fan
Solubility of Gold.
Gold is one of the group of met
als soluble only in that mixture of
nitric and hydrochloric acids known
as aqua regia. It has been found,
however, that the presence of cer
tain organic compounds renders
gold soluble in hydrochloric acid.
Thus a mixture of this acid and
chloroform is found to be a solvent.
Ethyl, or ordinary alcohol, methyl
alcohol and amyl alcohol are among
the other substances which give to
hydrochloric acid the power of dis
solving gold. Tho solution takes
place slowly in the cold and more
quickly on heating.
An Appropriate Nam*.
"It is a pretty name,” the im
pressionable traveler murmured.
“But, tell me, why do they call you
Manita?”
There was an arch emile on the
savage maiden’s face. .
“Evidently,” she said as she sig-
naled to her brothers, who were
concealed in tha brush with clubs,
“you do not know our favorite
food.”
TRY AN
Electric Iron
Carrollton Electric
Company
Right on th. Job.
Manufacturer — I understand.
You wish for some armor plate
which no cannon shot can pierce.
We are turning out that kind of
thing every day.
Government Agent-L No, no!
Yon misunderstand me. I wish
yon to manufacture a cannon that
can pierce any armor plate.
Manufacturer — Oh, certainly!
We hre turning out that kind of
work every day also.—London Mail.
Independently Mieoreblo.
' A day or two ago, having joined
the boat train at Dover harbor
station, the writer found a fellow
passenger resting a heavy head on
worried looking hands. The
weather was quite pleasant, but one
can never judge the channel by the
appearance of Dover beach, so the
question was asked sympathetically,
"Was the crossing very rough?”
"No,” said the passenger; "tMi
1$ a personal matter.”—London
Equal to tho Oeeaolon.
'"Does your husband ever com
pare your ways with his family?”
asked the mischief making friend.
“Oh, yea,” said the little bride,
dimpling, “but I never get angry.”
“That's aweet of you,” warmly
exclaimed the friend. “But what
does tha brute say?”
"He says,” replied the bride,
"that there is nothing in our home
like the rumpus his mother used to
make."—Washington Star.
\
TXTE HOLD up Red Meat—the
YY chew for men. Always
good—better now than
ever. No spice to make your tongue |
sore—no excessive sweetening to
make you spit yourself away and ruin'
your stomach. Just high-grade North
Carolina tobacco, properly sweetened by 1
a perfect process. Sure** you’re bom,'
it * the real thing in good chewing.
Get busy today and find out for yourself,!.
Cut out this ad. and mail to us with your
name and address for our FREE offer to chewers only.
Name.
Address.
Made only by Lupfert SCALES Co., Winston-Salem, N. C.