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dr. tichenor s antiseptic
MAN OR BEAST. FOR EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL USE.
H6cils Wounds, Burns, Bruises, Scalds, Cuts, Sprains. &c.
GUP6S Colic, Cramps, Cholera Morbus and Indigestion.
FOR STOCK—CoIic, Botts, Foot-Evil, Scratches, Wire Cuts, Etc.<o^^*>-
&v\je SaWs^aeVvow —5Qc a'BoWVe. I^ol®o (SQ-pMfg' and Props, New Orleans. La*
BABY’S
FACE
LOOKED LIKE RAW MEAT.
Our baby’s face and neck was all raw moat,
and something awful to look at. The way
that child suffered, mother and child never
had any rest day or night as it constantly
itched, and the blood used to flow down hvr
cheeks. We had doctors and the dispensary
with no result. By using Cctocura Resol
vent, Cuticura (ointment), and 'CunccKA
Soap, the child iras entirv.lg Jtealcd,
Mrs. GARXJQSS, ‘-13 Nassau Awe., Brooklyn.
Mothers, to knew ihtarm bath with CrnruKi
Bo*r,,nd arinele aDointin" with Cuticura. will afford
instant reliofin the most distre-MO,; of itching, tiurninc,
and scaly infsntile humor, of the skin and scalp, with
lost of hair, and not to use them, it to tail in your duty.
Sold throughout the world. Pottru lißvor.yn Chi.
Coef., Props., Boston. Row to Cur, baby Humors,free.
Tried Friends Best.
For thirty yearsTutts Pills have
proven a blessing to the invalid.
Are .ruly the sick man’s friend.
A Known Fact
For bilious headache,dyspepsia
sour stomach, malariayconstipa
tion and all kindred diseases.
TUTT’S Liver PILLS
AN ABSOLUTE CURE.
Sick headache, bUlrowmess, constipa
tion and all liver and stomach troubles
can be quickly cured fey using those
famous little pills known as IleWitts
Little Early Risers. They are pleasant
to take and never gripe.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
Your Marchan* for Dr. MuMs Little Book luable Information. Free.
HEARKEN TO WORDS OF EXPERIENCE AND WISDOM I
37j There was a womae, at I'm heart tell. But ehe heard good news, in her hour of mod,
u Who was always complaining, she woe neuer well; Of Moffett’s wonderful INDIAN WHO.
I IVI IS I A IVI % A# ET ET n Regulate* and Relieves Woman of all Pains and Troubles Peculiar
I INuinlN W t. £. U .... to Her Sex. TKY IT AND BK WELL AGAIN. . . . .
• B XfcSTHINAa tin b*t mm! lure to ll t ru+*.c\ luc urua w*.
Farming in Olden Times.
The Romans were the first people
t<* practice plowing between the row’s
ot wheat as w r e do between corn.
The idea was suggested in a singular
manner. A war-like tribe, having
ravished a section of land at the base
of the Alps, undertook to destroy the
growing crops by plowing them up,
but instead it was found that the
rows accidentally hilled were twice
as large as those that were not. The
harrow or hoe used by the Chinese
farmer is of the rudest construction.
The plow is usually drawn women
of the lowest classes. Two hundred
and fiftty years ago, when the corn
stolen fronu the Indians by our Puri
tan ancestors was planted in the sand
of Cape Cod, the only instrument
used was a ponderous and ill-shapen
Dutch hoe, which required a heavy
man to handle at all. Our first pro
cesses were not much in advance of
those of the barbarians of Central
Europe; today .we number several
hundred tools, from the most delicate
to the combined reaper and thrasher,
which cuts, thrashes, winnows and
bags several hundred bushes of grain
per day.
* 1-
AIDS DIGESTION,
REGULATES THE BOWELS,
CURES CHOLERA-INFANTUM,
and MAKESTEETHING EASY.
Gives Rosy Cheers,
STRENGTH, HEALTH and HAPPINESS
TO WOMAN.
PREPARED ONLY BY
C.J. MOFFETTf M. D„ sunu.m.
Is Highly Recom
mended for Coughs,
Coi.ds,Harsen ess.
Sore Throat,Bron
chitis. Asthma,
Whooping Cough,
and All Diseases of
l£/AARS
cough-croup;
EXPECTORANT!
the Throat, Lungs and Bronchial Tubes.
- * Positive Specific tor Croup.
DeWitt’s Little Early -risers.
The famous little pilt.
Mothers, heathen l white t tell TEETH IN A cures them of all /rain.
What will y>ur babe well-- And gives them rosy cheeks again.
Ye; gWe the child l>r. Moffet t*s TF.KTHINA (Teething Powdr), and save its life TEETHINA Allays Irri
tation, K gnlates the Bowels, Aids Digestion, Strengthens the Child, Cores Eruptions and Soret, end makes Teething
*r Remove* anci Prevents Worm*.
Don’t Situ It Dors. HI *1 IS
Don't snub a boy because he wears
shabby clothes. When Edison, the
inventor, first entered Boston, he
wore a pair of yellow linen breeches
in the depth of winter.
Don't snub a boy because of the
! ignorance of his parents. Shakes
peare, the world’s poet, was the son
j of a man who was unable to write his
own name.
Don't snub a boy because his home
is plain and unpretending. Abraham
Lincoln's early home was a log cabin.
Don't snub a boy because he chooses
an humble trade. The author of the
“Pilgrim’s Progress” was a tinker.
Don’t snub the boys because of
! dullness in his lessons. Hogarth, the
I celebrated painter and engraver, was
Ia stupid boy at his books.
Don't snub a boy because he stut
ters. Demosthenese, the great orator
of Greece, overcame a harsh and
stuttering voice.
Don't snub him for any reason—
not only because he may some day
outstrip S”OU in the race of life, but
because it is neither right nor Chris
tian.
Thousands of persons have been ciued
of uiles by using DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
Salve, It heals promptly and cures ec
zema and all skin diseases. It gives
immediate relief.
I)U. W. A. WISIGHT.
Parents are Unfair to Teacher.
•‘That existing methods of educat
ing the young fall short <of the ideal
there is scarcely any question,” writes
Edward Bok, in the September La
dies’ Home Journal. “The most
prominent educators adonit this fact.
Every effort is undoubtedly made to
better prevailing systems. But the
fight is single-handed. As teachers
and educators constantly say: ‘We
are alone: parents give ns no assist
ance.' They do not even give us the
benefit of ordinary interest.’ And
this is true—lamentably true. Par
ents are all too lax about the methods
pursued in educating tbeir children
In hundreds of cases they do not
even kno\v what the methods are.
They know nothing about them.
There is no co-operation of thejparent
with the teacher. However much we
may be able to improve modern
methods of education, the best re
sults to our children cannot be reach
ed until parent and teacher shall
come into closer relations than they
are at present.”
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the //,
Signature of C^c
Tlie; Voice of Roosevelt.
Theodore Roosevelt is not taken
so seriously in Washington as he
seems to be in some other parts of
the country, St. Louis Globe Demo
crat. Here it has become establish
ed that a certain amount of latitude
of expression must be allowed to hirn
if the government would make use of
his excellent qualities. Mr. Roose
velt is permitted to say things which
would not pass unnoticed if a less
worthy person was so outspoken. |
Sometime before the war began, while
he was assistant secretary of the navy, -
Mr. Roosevelt could hardly restrain
his impatience over what he consid-J
ered too deliberate progress of the j
administration in bringing on thecrisis |
with Spain. In one of his occasional
vocal explosions he let out such a j
curdling declaration as this:
“The blood of 250,000 murdered
Cubans lies at the door of the white
house.”
The statement that Mr. Roosevelt
had employed such language about
the administration of which he was a
part was laid before the president
with the suggestion that it called for
some rebuke.
“No," said the president, “I don't
think we had better pay any attention
to it. We may need this hot young
blood later on.”
And so it turned out.
I
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That l* what It wu made lor.
„ Auer’s
Cherry peetoraf
“We tried almost everything fer
asthma without success. At last we
tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral and the
relief was immediate.”
S. A. ELLIS, Keene, N. H
circs Asthma.
HALF-SIZE BOTTLES, 50c.
Telling a Furrier’s Secret.
“Furs become very much soiled
and need renovation as much as any
other part of a woman’s wardrobe,”
says Emma M. Hooper in the Sep
tember Ladies Home Journal, “but
among the many directions given for
cleansing and renovating, one seldom
finds anything regarding furs. Fur
rier’s keep all such trade secrets
strictly, but occasionally there is a
leakage, and I am able to givtj* the
result of one. Dark furs, as seal
mink and black marten, are cleaned
with fine cedar or mahogany sawdust,
which is kept in stock by furriers.
The garment is ripped free of the
lining and the fur laid on a table with
the hair up; then the sawdust is tub
bed in the hair and neither strength
nor sawdust is spared in the process.
When finished shake the fur lightly
over the table and save the sawdust
that drops out. Then put upon the
table one or two feather pillows in
their usual muslin slips, and upon
these lay the furs, hair down this
time, and beat thoroughly with a
switch until the sawdust is out and
the fur as clean as a pin; keep mov
ing the pillows as the fur must have
a soft support while beaten. White
furs are cleaned with w'hite cornmeal
applied as the sawdust is on the dark
er varieties. If w'hite furs are only
slightly soiled they may he cleaned
with magnesia in small cubes that is
well rubbed in and then thoroughly
dusted.”
Win your battles against disease by
acting promptly. One Minute Cough
Cure produces immediate results. When
taken early it prevents consumption.
And in later stages it furnishes prorr.pt
relief. Du. W. A. Wuioiir.
The Passion lor Wealth.
No insanity is more complete than
that which unreasonable craving for
sudden wealth often produces. The
great Duke of Marlborough used to
walk twenty furlongs through the rain
and sleet in the middle of the night
to add one English sixpence to his
fortune of a million pounds sterling.
A celebrated French miser picked
bones out of the streets, gnawing
them like a dog, while his income
was over 5,000 francs a day. One of
the most remarkable chapters in the
early Dutch history is the reference
to the tulip mania. The impression
was that fortunes were to be obtained
in the trading in tulips. The bulbs
were bought and sold by weight, each
fraction of a pennyweight counted as
carefully as jewel merchants count
their diamonds. The trade of the
nation was turned into this single
channel and ordinary industries suf
fered almost complete paralysis. So
high at length did the fever rise that
over $5,000 was offered and refused
for a single bulb. At last the bubblfe
burst. Men once rich became poor,
the middle class were reduced to pau
perism, and Holland hardly recovered
from the blow in a hundred years.
Don’t Neglect Tour Liver.
Liver (roubles quickly result in gerious j
somplications, and the man who ueglocts his
liver has little reyanl for health. A hotlle 1
of ftrowns’ Iron Hitters taken now and then
will keep the liver in perfect order. If the i
disease has developed, Itrownn’lron Hitters
wilt cure it permanently. Stnin/th and
vitality will always follow its use. '
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
Twenty Stories of .Hark Twain.
Mark Twain is the next famous
man to be “anneodotalized” by the
Ladies' Home Journal, and his clos
est friends have contributed twenty
funny stories about the humorist for
the article. The stories will show
that all the good things about Mark
Twain have not been told. Several
ludicrous “snapshot” pictures of
Mark have also been loaned by his
friends—all printed for the first time.
Happiness.
I believe in happiness. lam sure
our God meant us for it. 1 think we
are the better for it; l long that every
one of you should be happy in the
fullest sense. As life passes clouds
must gather over you and break; but
now in your happiest time, now while
you are comparatively free from care,
now is the time for you to be happy.
But how? 'There is but one way to
obtain happiness; only when it is not
sought for its own sake, but comes as
the natural result of a noble life;
when duty and delight are synortym
ous, when gladness found in the ser
vice of others and not in self-gratifica
tion.
Who follows pleasure, pleasure slays,
(Jed’s wrath up,on himself he wreaks;
But all delights attend his days
Who takes with pleasure but never
seeks.
Frances M. Russ.
The editor of the Evans City, Pa.,
Globe, writes, “One Minute Cough Cure
is rightly named. It cured my children
after all other remedies failed.” It cures
coughs, colds, and all throat and lung
troubles. I)n. W. A. Wkigiit.
Beware of Misjudging.
Perhaps it would be better for most
of us to complain less of being mis
understood and to take more care that
we do not misunderstand other peo
ple. It ought to give us pause at a
time to remember that each one has
a stock of cut-and-dried judgments
on his neighbors, and that the chances
are that most ot them are quite er
roneous. What our neighbor really
is we may never know; but we may
be pretty certain that he is not what
!wa have imagined and that many
things we have thought of him are
; quite beside the mark. What be
does, we have seen, but we have no
idea what may have been his thoughts
and contentions. The mere surface
of his character may be exposed, but
of the complexity within we have not
the faintest idea. People crammed
with self-consciousness and self con
ceit are often praised as humble,
while shy and reserved people are
judged to be proud. Some whose
whole life is one subtle, studied sel
fishness get the name of self sacrifice
while other silent, heroic souls are I
condemned for want of humanity.—
lan Maclaren.
Bob Moore, of LaEayette, huh, says
that for constipation he has found l)a-
Witt’f Little Early Kisers to be perfect,
They never gripe. Try them for stomach
and liver troubles.
I)n. W. A. Windin'.
A (dribs Voice.
A distinguished difference between
the English and the American girl is
in the voice, and comparison does not
result favorably for the latter. The
low tones which Shakespeare recom
mended and which are among the
most attractive charms of the nine
teenth century English women are
the exception, not the rule, with the
American. HOB
The girl whose father's bank ac
count is sufficiently large to send her
to a school of the “finishing” type is
expected to return with a certain
amount of knowledge and mental dis
cipline, to be sure, but to her social
abilities and charms much more
thought is given. Least of her ac
complishments, she must dance, have
some music, perhaps sing; she must
be perfect mistress of herself at teas,
dinners and receptions, with small
talk ever ready. But to the accom
paniment of all she does, her speak
ing voice, how much, rather how lit
tle, real attention is directed.—Phila
delphia Inquirer.
CURE ALL YOUR PAINS WITH
Pain-Killer.
A Medicine Chest In Itself.
Simple, Safe and Quick Cure for
CRAMPS. DIARRHOEA, COUGHS,
COLDS, RHEUMATISM,
MEURALOIA.
25 ana 50 cent Bottle*.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
BUY ONLY THE GENUINE.
PERRY DAVIS*
All drugxi*t* guarantee Dr. Mil**' Put
pinna to stop Headache. “One cent a dee*"
At Four Score.
Dr. Miles’ Nervine Restores Health.
UNCLE EZEKIEL OBEAR assessor and
tax collector, lleverly, Mass., who has
passed the 80th life mllo stono, says:
"Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine has done a
great deal of good. I suffered for years from
sleeplessness and nervous heait trouble.
Would feci weary and used up In tho morn
ing, had no ambition and iny work seemed a
burden. A friend recommended Dr. Miles’
Nervine, and I purchased a bottle under
protest as I had tried so many remedies un
successfully, I tliokght it no use. But It
gave mo restful eleep, a good appetite and
restored me to energetic health. It Is a
grand good medicine, and I will gladly write
anyone Inquiring, full partlcnlarsof mysat-
I>r. Miles’ Remedies
are sold by all drug-BN? miui* , >M
gists under a positive
guarantee, first bottle E-NOrVlfl© -S
benefits or money re- • pettorfiS jfl
funded. Rook on dis- Kr. ,—m,
eases of tho heart and
nerves free. Address, dHHiIHMMHHB
DR. MILES MEDICAL CO.. Elkhart, lad.
<l FAVORITE AND
most popular
Slßflowers
PANSIES, NASTURTIUMS
SWEET PEAS, one Pkt. of
Wid|jyV each variety for only C njo
flfxJ Iho fIddPMS of 7mo Prltndß U lllvi
Including rrip c®pv of JBWH (hitiilng 110 and Floral Culture,
MISiC. H- LIPr.fICOTT, 119 Sixth Strett So.. lllDOMpoflft. Woo.
SENT FREE
To Housekeepers—
LielllO COMPANY'S
Extracts ot Beet
cook book -
telling hew to prepare many de
licate and deih ious dishes.
Address, MRPjlci CO.,
O. 13ox 271 L New Morfp
iiiPv
%6eorgul
R’YCft y
Excursion ticket* at rodneed rates
between local points are on sale after
12 noon Saturdays, nnd until H p. a,
Sundays,pood returning 1 until Monday
1 noon following dute ot sale.
Persons con tv in plating either a bnsl
ness or pleasure trip to the F.astihonlM
in vestlgute and consider the advantaged
offered via Savannah and Steamer lines.
| The rales generally are considerably
cheaper by thin route, and, in addition
to this, passengers save sleeping car
fare,and the expense of meal* eu rout*.
Vie take pleasure In commending to
Ihe traveling public the route referred
to, namely, via Central of Ueorglß
Railway to Savannah, thence via thn
elegant Steamer* of the Ocean Steans
■hip Company to New York and Boston,
and the Merchants and Miners lino
to Baltimore.
The comfort of the traveling pnbllo
la looked after In a manner that defied
criticism.
Electric lights and electric belld)
handsomely furnished staterooms,
modern sanitary arrangement*. Th#
tables are supplied with all thedellcd
cies of the Eastern and Southern mar
kets. All the luxury and comforts ef
a modern hotel while on board ship,
affording every opportunity for real,
recreation or pleasure.
Each steamer has a stewardess to
look especially after ladles and chile
dren traveling alone.
Steamers sail from Savannah for
New York daily except Thursdays an 4
Sundays, and for Boston twice a week.
For information as to rates and sail
ing dAte* of steamers and for bertk
reservations, apply to nearest tleket
agent ef this company, or to
J. C. HAILE, den. Passenger Agt,
K. H. MINTON, Traffic Manager,
Savannah, tta.