Newspaper Page Text
Your money back
If yon are not satisfied
po YOU that ® ooropany with a capital of t500.000.0a paid tn fun, and tha
proud reputation of 36 years of continuous success, would make such an offer and not carry
it out to the letter? _
w WE KNOW we can please you and save you money, for HAYNTER wrnwrv ww*
direct from ortg^nal richness and flavor, carrying a UNITED
STATES REGISTERED DISTILLER S GUARANTEE of PURITY and AGE and saving
you the big profits of the dealers. That’s why it’s best for medicinal purposes. That’s why
fessMSisr aswswashs ?»»««■
Direct from our distillery to YOU
Sam Dialers’ Profits I Prevints Adulteration I — ”
HAYNER WHISKEY
PURE SEVEN-YEAR.OLD RYE
4 FULL $0.20 EXPRESS
QUARTS O" PREPAID-
We FULL QUARTS of RAYNER’S SEVEN-YEAR. i-' *i
OLD RYE for *3.St, and we will pay the express charges. When you receive fiSI
the whiskey, tiyit and If you don't find it all right and as good as you ever Sai
drank or can bly from any body else at any price, then send it back at our Kill
expense and your 83.20 will be returned to you by next mail. How could
an offer be fairer? We take all the risk and stand all the expense if
the goods do not please you. Won't you let us send you a trial order? W«
Ship in a plain sealed case; no marks to show what’s inside.
Orders for Arlz., Cal., Col., Idaho, Mont, Nev., N. Mex.. Ore.,Utah Wash
or Wyo., must be on the basis of 4 Quarts for 54.00 bv Exnreua MIVNWffV
Pi epaid or *O Quarts for 816.0 (Eby Freight Prepaid. P
Write our nearest office and do it NOW.
THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY wSI
ATLANTA, M. OATTON, OHIO ST. LOUIS MU ST. PAUL. MINN. IS-BSEtHI
150 DffiTHJJHBY, TROY, O. ESTABLISHED 1866.
———™—IIMIIIIIIIII 111 ..ioUsWH W'’
L. W. GODDARD & SON
Have just received a large shipment of
TSpring Mailing and Rugs!
Call and see our lines before buying, as we are
giving SPECIAL PRICES on these goods.
I. W. GODDARD & $O.l, fto. 3 and 5 Solomon St
GO TO THE
x Griftin Hardware Co.
For IRON KING fAfllZ CTfIVEQ
and FARMER GIRL 1 vAJU H JIU VEd
Steel Ranges and Stoves of all kinds.
Quns Guns Guns
r The largest and best assortment on the marke
f Don’t buy until you get our prices.
t GRIFFIN HARDWARE CO.
IrmTahule woks
MORRIS & JONES, Proprietors.
SUCCESSORS TO H. H. JONES & CO.
This firm of marble builders is now prepared to do artistic Monu-
J mental and Granite Work—ar d in fact anything that can be built out of
M stone, When you are thinking of buying a monument for a loved one
F us a card and we will call on you at once. We have.no agents ont.
We deal direct with yon and save you from 20 to 40 per cent.
MORRIS & JONES,
Corner Broadway and Blh Sts. GRIFFIN, GA.
50-PIEGE DINNER SET EDEE
V onderfnl inducement to sell our Swan Bakin* Powder. B BB mH E.’yaHtiHtSW B
"jety Purchaserot a pound can of Swan Bakin* Powder " " .!> W
oyderour Plan No. 65 will reeeivethis beautiful Water Set. consist- .aasuManw, JSf
mg of pitcher and six glasses, full size, free. Latest cut glass pat- iaSF
J®* 1 -. Bemanher this Water Set Is given absolutely free to every ■»
purchaser of household articles as described by our Plan No. 65.
la, ly "-bo sells fourteen cans of Swan Bakin* Powder,
under 1 Jan No. with the Inducement of thia beantTful W ater
n ’^. to each purchaser, we give a handaomely decorated 50-
J’**” Dinner Het or a &6-Ptece Tea Het, absolutely free. We
™ Pot require any money In advaned. Simply send us your name I*4*
SSI. ‘Bvse and we will forward our different plans ana full Infor- I*/<#'- ■ i
mation. You will be surprised to see what can be aecom-
{’‘"'.“cd tn a few hours’ wordc. We will allow you fifteen days to deliver the goods and collect the money before
gDing us.* We allow large cash commission If preferred. We pay tall freight. We also give Bedsteads.
In? Chairs, Shirt Waist Patterns, Musleal Instruments. LaeelCurtalaa Roekin* Chairs and
mu>dnsdjof other nsefntand desirable articles, for selling our goods. Write for Plans and full information.
® to VOWA SVPPLIKa COMPANY, fl»7 and USD Pine (Street, Mt. I.ouls, Mo.
We assure our readers that the tialvon* Supplies Company is thoroughly reliable.—Editor-
The Lanier southern Business college
K-T— — THt MOST PpACTKAI BUSIMTSS COlUtl IcAT.LOtufl
(NIACON.GA | AMtP/C*. ' FREE)
"Ateo bMdio.i -a**i Vtoaatume ftwn* Atlanta, Ga.
PEMNVKOYaI.
M Ort<ii»at and Only Genuine.
Always r'liable Ladle*, awl; Drirrsit
JMIJr-W ror JHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
in REP and Gold BMtallie boxes sea ed
adth ribbon. Taken" ‘her. R<-fu«e
WtS* Wj Paw ff?7o*3 Hutatlta» » »d iraita*
1/ / fly Munn. Buy of yonr Drw r «en i 4c. io
■ 7** Mampa fer Particular t ewtlnonlala
Si r *I •* Relle*’ for Ladh -. •»* U«er. by r«.
i MaU. 10,000 rc st)3!ot>Ulß. Sold by
_ - i-s. ChlcheoUr «L.ieaa9Mri €•*•
Jta»- ih-m. )fn>u., Fk
J. R. WILLIAMS,
Attorney at Law,
GRIFFIN, GA.
Office over Lower’s Jewelry Store.
Practice in all the courts of the State.
Money fco loan on easy terms
Omoman s.
7 f ■. ri/hy. A.
CORINNE B. ECKLEY.
An Expert Anntoxnlat, College Pro
feonor, Inventor and Author.
There lives and labors In Chicago a
woman of International fame and of
such high and rare and scientific attain
ment as to make her unique among wo
mankind. Her life, devoted on the one
hand to her work and on the other to
her charming home, is the life of the
ideal woman, concerned, as It is, with
real world’s work ami genuinely domes
tic felicity and culture.
This woman is Corinne B. Eckley, ex
pert anatomist, professor of anatomy in
two colleges, head instructor in anato
my in the Chicago College of Physi
cians and Surgeons, University of Illi
nois; author, Inventor, and one of the
most successful lecturers and demon
strators of human anatomy in Ameri
ca. Mrs. Eckley is the wife of Profess-
OOBINNE B. ECKLEY.
or William T. Eckley, the noted Ameri
can anatomist and man of science,
whose untiring labors In the art of dis
section have done so much to simplify
and make easy one of the most difficult
branches of human knowledge.
Mrs. Eckley has the rare distinction
as membership in the American Asso
ciation of Anatomists. But one other
woman has been honored in this way.
She is co-author with her husband of
several important works, among which
are “Regional Anatomy of the Head
and Neck,” “Anatomical Nomencla
ture” and “A Manual of Dissection,”
books that are constantly used by sur
geons. Her inventive genius was dis
closed in a most unexpected way. For
merly longitudinal division of the spi
nal bones was made with crude tools
and much labor. Mrs. Eckley devised
a peculiar and most useful instrument
to do this difficult work, the laminecto
my forceps, a device that Insures a suc
cessful and easy solution of the prob
lem.
In her home life Mrs. Eckley is most
enviably happy. Her comfortable home
in Jackson boulevard is well ordered
and excellently managed, and to see
her at work supervising the making of
preserves from fruits grown under her
eye on her farm in Michigan one would
hardly suspect that this busy house
wife Is an honored member of the
American Society of Anatomists and
the author of text books on anatomical
nomenclature. “When I am in my
home,” she says, “I live; when I am
away from home I work.”—Chicago
Tribune.
The Art of Rentinw.
Rest and sleep are the Sisters of Mer
cy who go about to smooth wrinkles
away from women’s foreheads and
otherwise repair the ravages of too
strenuous days. The idea of constant
occupation Is all wrong, and the wom
an who has acquired the art of resting
—for it is an art—will be able to show
In middle age a face luminous with life
and youth when her industrious sister
is soar and gray.
This is not a plea for idleness, be
cause whatever her condition in life
may be the woman who has nothing to
do is not only unhappy, but dangerous.
She is bound to stray over into the
country of the arch enemy and find the
mischief especially reserved for unoc
cupied hands.
The homekeeper who carries the af
fairs of her household on successfully
Is entitled to the honors of the general
in the field of war. But there are times
when she must rest in her tent If she
would continue strong and capable of
carrying on the long campaign. Then
she must go to her room and lock the
door upon her euros and her family
alike and throw herself down for a
sweet, reviving snatch of slumber.
Nature makes no mistakes even if she
does shock the community, and no mat
ter what the hour may be it is time to
, sleep when one feels sleepy, and a wee
nap in the very midst of the morning
work will sometimes prove a source of
splendid strength for the remainder of
the day.—Exchange.
Frujrallty and Economy.
Frugality and economy are home vir
tues which are needful to the prosper
ity of the home.
Said great and good and growling old
Dr. Johnson: “Frugality may be termed
the daughter of prudence, the sister of
temperance and the parent of liberty.
He that is extravagant will quickly be
come poor, and poverty will enforce de
pendence and invite corruption.”
The need of practicing economy be
longs to every one, whether iu the pos-
session of an Income no more than suf
ficient for a family’s requirements or
of a large fortune which banishes
| financial adversity from the mind.
To manage a little well is a vast and
glorious merit in bouse managing.
Said famous Bishop Hall: “He Is
' good wagoner that can turn in a little
j room. To live well in abundance Is the
praise of the estate, not of the person.
I will study more how to give a good
account of my little than how to make
It more.”
This is the part of wisdom, partlcn
; larly since those who manage a little
well are the most likely to succeed in
the management of larger matters and
also to have the larger matters to man
age.
i But woe to the frugality that Is al
lowed to degenerate into parsimony or
meanness.
Draping an Arched Doorway,
An unusual treatment of an arched
doorway was noticed in a house recent
; ly. Often a ixfie is placed above the
• highest point in the arch, from which a
lambrequin or curtain falls straight, an
arrangement which, of course, destroys
the arched effect In this doorway,
however, the arch was preserved in a
simple and effective way. A curved
frame of soft wood about three Inches
| wide was made to fit the arch, its shape
j and appearance suggesting an elongat
ied skirt hanger. This was first cov
-1 ered with a piece of the lambrequin ma
i terial, shirred on, with a short, fringed
• crosspiece of the same festooned from
| one side to the other in graceful sash-
I lon. The whole thing was then hung
| up on three hooks placed for the pur
: pose on the wail at the point at either
end of the arch.—Table Talk.
Drudgery.
Any labor Is drudgery when it lacks
qualification or applied bAilns. Al
though it is generally so considered,
housekeeping is not a drudgery unless
it is made so. No matter what the oc
cupation, it may be made either a
pleasure or a drudgery. We have ell
seen women with small families make
a perfect labor of even looking over a
small house, while a more intelligent
housewife with a large family had
hours of leisure. Like every other pro
fession. housekeeping is easy or hard
according to the amount of brains put
into the work if there is the proper in
terest and preparation for the work.
Any work is drudgery to the lazy, in
different, thoughtless person.—Cooking
Club.
Good Rnlea to Follow.
Five rules of life to make a woman
healthier at least, if not wealthier and
wiser, are:
First—Take plenty of exercise.
Second.—Eat plain food moderately.
Third.—Go to bed as earlv as possi
ble.
Fourth.—Avoid stimulants.
Fifth.—Live with regularity.
You can help out a freckled face
with lotions and powders, but you
can’t make your beauty permanent
that way. If you really want to have
a fine color, a fine figure, a flue diges
tion and be fair to look upon try these
rules and see what they will do for
you.
The Renlly Clever Pone.
There is much more intellectual clev
i erness among the girls of today than
1 there was fifty years ago. A flippant
cousin says: “It does not pay for a girl
to be clever. Men are afraid of you
If you are, and the other girls hate
you.” But between a pedantic prig
and a well educated woman there is a
vast difference. The really clever wo
men are those who disguise their learn
! Ing and pose as amiable and charming
idiots.—Ladies’ Field.
Caretulnenn In Toilet.
Nothing is a more positive sign of a
careless woman than torn gloves and
untidy shoes, waistbands that sever
connections or collars that part com
pany with the shirt waist Try not to
be one of them. You defeat your own
ends and neither look well nor feel
comfortable. Dress carefully and aim
at plainness and neatness rather than
a more showy style of costume.
*
Puffy Eyei.
I Puffy places under the eyes are usu
ally due to some kidney disorder. Cold
water should be taken freely, say a
glassful half an hour before each meal
and about two hours afterward. This
treatment will not only cause the flab
biness to disappear, but will also ren
der the complexion clear and the gen
eral health better.
Ham Pnttlea.
Ham patties make an acceptable
luncheon or supper dish and a good
Way to use up cold ham. Chop the
meat fine, allow two parts of bread
crumbs to one of ham, wet the crumbs
with milk, season with a generous
lump of butter, put into patty pans
and break an egg over each.
The Infant's Robe.
The length of the infant’s robe is less
extravagant than formerly, and three
months is now considered the proper
age for putting on short drosses. Nain
-1 sook and French mull are the mate
rials most employed for dresses,
though thin lawns are also used.
When putting parasols away they
should be left unrolled, and in order to
prevent the silk from cutting loose tis
sue paper should be placed between the
folds.
If you put a little whiting every day
in the water in which you rinse your
silver you will not need to clean It so
often.
Excessive drinking of strong tea and
coffee will produce a brown skin after
n few years.
Wrinkles can be warded off by bath
ing the face every night in hot milk.
is caused hy a disraseja
R h Sconditionof theblood. Ramon’s Pfflsig
M 1 iMLlSj?purify the blood, thus curing rbeu- ■
rnatism ~ rcmov^n g the cause. 25c. J
■ ft H ft IF ft ft 1 A
lUAdIUnIA
M Tor Infants and Children.
'CAS^BHi^ he Y° u Have
IsSSI *R« ■«*«
similatingtheFooclahdßegula- ■
ImglhaStoinadsandßowdsof || Beal'S th© f <
/J$
ness and RestConlains neither |S XT If l |p
. Opium,Morphine nor Mineral, ||l 01
. Not Nah. co tic. -3
I a
/w« » M 1 If I
AWUO.AAIr- | pi
* I A R* ♦
| Ofl |4 $ |M D Isl
f H T • IB
A perfect Remedy for Conslipa- Ml V ft* UvU
Hon,Sour Stomach,Diarrlktea 91 lAr
Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- Hi |p Adm am
ncss and Loss of Sleep, i 1 Ffl | IIV R f
Fac Simla Signature of l|H
> NEW* YORK. J| Thirty Years
j C ASTORIA
TMI OfUTkUR WMMWV, RfW WWI
What’s
the Use?
There is None,
Paving a Profit—
any kind of a Profit on
.•
Furniture,
Mattings,Rugs
and other Household Goods, when you can
have them here at actual Factory cost and
freight? Come, let us demonstrate !
B. & E.