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Slaves t¢ Spring Catarrh Restored to Heaith bv Pe-ru-na.
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o ONoline o| | e A Mr. James A. Moody, Ex-president Board of
-§\ @ i o R o Education, Mineral Co., W. Va., writes from 314
Miee Lyt Horair Grand Reconderof Amert $\ RSO &8 oLI!1 I i gy bl | Massachusetts avenue, N. E., Washington, 1. ¢,
R S it e e, e e as follows:
P— N\ & R SR e i «“My family have used Peruna for several
el and It kecps me pertectly well NWi Sag L | o M )bl et with exceient reuits and ! take
BN Pl A s Roars sme pariacly WEE N e T WA iinitned, S B T e i pleasure in testifving to its superiority as a
s o N e | i] )i i R R R e e remedy for catarrh.
“/ am able to continue working and do not NN R N | Gi gl it i i “Every spring that dreaded disease will show
gaked (hreo GNIAS: £odt. 48 1 AURE 10 fEaE R s, 0 B VI R i up in my family and we always turn instinctive.
have to 3 H SRS S PR v
doevery year et such alongrest§ [l oy S| N_— - Iy o Peruna to ward it off.
99 £ mul S 5 SOD (A RUADIAGH 8 L3R DaS, N 0l MISS i s «It has never yet failed, and I never lose an
iet soon rids the system of ail dis- 3||/G R\ "o S= (= iy Yt N 3 pportuniiy of recommending it 1o my frionds
and coughs and soon rids the system of all dis- Wn.G. R \ MAR X Gl e e e
ease and is an admirable medicine. Ican hon- QT HUNIER. \\ 4:///&//\(@—/'\)\&
S " = E——— :
Spring Catarrh.
Almost every one has come to believe
that spring is a season that brings de
rangements of the body dependent on
blood impurities.
This belief is an old one, is nearly uni
wersal, and has arisen, not as the result
of the teachings of the medical frater
nity, but has been learned in the bitter
school of experience.
Nervous Depression.
Depression of the nervous system at
the approach of spring is a fertile source
of blood impurities.
There are general lassitude,dull, heavy
gensations, continual tired feelings, with
irregular appetite, and sometimes loss
of sleep.
That Tired Feeling.
That tired feeling, which is the nat
urai resvit of the depressing effect of
warm weather immediatcly after the
invigorating cold of winter, quickly
dissppears when Peruna is taken,
Two Carloads cf Powder in a Single Blast. $260,-
000 Paid for One Mile of Work. 2,629 Men Em
ployed on Piecec of Track for Wabash System.
“Look out! Look out! It's going
off”* was the wild c¢ry heard a few
days ago in Paw Paw, a small mnun-‘
tain-encircled West Virginia town on
the new line of the Wabash railroad, 1
twenty miles east of Cumberland,
when the ringing of bells and b]owingl
of whistles gave the warning that in a
few minutes the button would be
pressed that would explode 8,000
pounds of giant powder in the rocky
mountain side directy opposite and
close to the town. !
For three days the people of I~’aw‘
Paw had watched men carrying can
after can of powder into the tunnels!
dug into the face of rocks. As the
mountain side inereased, the alarm of
the people grew, and some in terror
left the town, while those remaining
filled their ears with cotton and waited
for-—they knew not what.
At last. when 325 cans of powder,
8,125 pounds, had been emptied in the |
arms extending right and left from tht-i
inner ends of the two 45-foot tunnels, |
wires laid and the tunnels closed, the |
electric button was pressed. There
was a deep, rumbling report, the
whole earth seemed to rock as though
shaken by an earthquake and tons of
vrock plunged forward and toppled
over into the canal and river.
Carloads of Powder in One Blast.
Not a stone had been thrown a hun- ‘
dred feet toward the frenzied town, |
but 20,000 yards of rock had been torn |
from the mountain side and many
precious days saved the contractors
who are building the ‘‘link’’ connect
ing the Western Maryland railroad at
Cherry Run with the West Virginia
Central railroad at Cumberland, and
thus Dbringing nearer realization
George Gould’s dream of making the
‘Wabash railroad an ocean to ocean
line.
It was only the proximity of this
blast to a town that made it particu
larly prominent on this railroad con
struction that is requiring a blast for
CASTORTIA.
Wi the The Kind You Haie Always Rought
Signature
The Proper Remedy.
Peruna meets every indication and
proves itself to be perfectly adapted to
all their varied peculiarities. Peruna
invigorates the system, rejuvenates the
feelings, restores the normal appetite
and procures regular sleep.
Do Not Delay.
Get a bottle of Peruna when the first
languid feelings make themselves ap
parent in the spring. Take it according
to the directions on the bottle. Con
tinue this treatment through the first
months of spring.
This course of treatment is no experi
ment; it is as positive in its results as
any fact of science can be.
A Spring Tonic.
Almost everybody needs a tonic in the
spring. Something to brace the nerves,
invigorate the brain, and cleanse the
blood. That Peruna will do this is be
yond ail question. Everyone who has
tried it has had the same experience as
almost every foot on the roadbed, in
fact it was a small one in comparison
to some that have been fired. In one
blast, in Sidling Hill mountain, the
charge consisted of 1,400 cans of
powder, just two carloads, and when
it was put off rocks weighing half a
ton were hurled through the air hun
dreds of yards, across the Potomac
river, and striking telegraph poles
along the Baltimore & Ohio railroad
broke them off close to the ground.
It is this necessity for almost con
tinuous blasting that has done much
toward making this sixty-five mile
strip of railroad construction the
most expensive of any built in recent
years, with the single exception of the
line over which the Wabash enters
Pittsburg. The cost of building the
first five miles from Cumberland aver
aged $250,000 a mile and the ayerage
cost for the sixty-five miles is $lOO,OOO
a mile. In building this connecting
link the Wabash has had to contend
with an unusually large number of
obstacles of a surprising variety,
some placed in the way by nature,
others by man.
Tunneling Through Solid Rock.
Until the advent of the Wabash it
was supposed there was no feasible
route through the narrow gaps in the
mountains between Cumberland and
Hancock, forty miles, save those fol
lowed by the Chesapeake and Ohio
canal and the Baltimore & Ohio rail
road. It was this belief that has kept
life in the old waterway, life sustained
by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
company to bar out any possible rival.
Some years ago the Hon. Henry G.
Davis., then owner of the West Vir
‘giniu(fentml railroad, had a route
‘surveyed through the country follow
‘ed by the Wabash, but it was given
up as impracticable. As a result, itis
not surprising that the construction of
this road is proving one of the great
est undertakings of years, requiring
application of almost every method
known in railroad building, and the
ingenuity of contractors who have
built railroads in almost every state
in the union has been taxed to the
utmost.
Upon forty miles of this line there
SPRING THE TIME TO CURE CATARRH.
. Pe-ru-na Invigorates Mind and Body.
Hon. Wm. G. Hunter, Ex-member North Carolina
Legislature, writes from the Census Office Building,
Washington, D. C., as follows:
“The greatest family medicine ever discovered, in
my opinion, which comes from experience as well
as observation, is Peruna.
“The most common affliction to humankind is a
bad cold. Peruna drives it out of doors, wards off
catarrh, invigorates and gives fresh strength to
mind and bod(. I give Peruna my unqualified en
dorsement.”—Wm, G. Hunter.
Mrs. Winnifred Power, an artist, who,
in a recent letter from 246 7th St., Port
land, Ore., says:
«] am pleased to speak a good word
for Peruna, as I found it an excellent
tonic and spring medicine and very ef
fective in ridding the system of cold
and catarrh.
¢“About two years ago my system was
all rundown in the spring and I thought
I would try and see if Peruna would be
of any assistance in bringing back my
health and strength.
“] found that it was splendid and ¢l
the medicine that I needed. In a little
over a month I was well and did not
need to take any more medicine.
“I shall recommend it to every one in
need of a tonic, and know that 1 have
only to take a few doses of Peruna when
I take a cold and I will soon be over it.”
—Winnifred Power,
Nature’s Assistance.
Spring is the best time to treat ca
tarrh. Nature renews herself every
spring. The system is rejuvenated by
‘ave engaged today 5,629 men, 300 ani
‘mals. nine locomotives and nine steam
shovels. For eighteen months there
has been no cessation of labor, and it
is hoped that in eight more the work
will be completed.
Obstacles to Be Met.
An idea of the difticulties encounter
ed ean be formed from the fact that
this hne in forty miles crosses the
Potomac river nine times, the Chesa
peake and Ohio canal seven times, the
Baltimore and Ohio railroad three
times, passes through mountain ranges
and spurs by five tunnels, varying in
length from 700 to 4,400 feet, through
ridges and hills by innumerable cuts,
many of them over fifty feet deep
through solid rock and almost a mile
in length, and that a great portion of
the road is being cut out of the rocky
sides of mountain ranges directly
above the canal. One of the most un
usual difficulties in railroad construe
tion and yet the most troublesome on
this line has been a disposition of the
earth and rock removed in making the
roadbed, a difficulty arising from the
fact that the Wabash follows closely
the canal route. While waiting for
legal right to bridge the old waterway
it was necessary to push the construc
tion work, and to do this the contract
ors employed some striking methods.
At Welton tunnel, a mile south of
Cumberland, a large wheel was placed
on top of the mountain above the tun
nel entrance, cables were run from
this across the river and canal to the
low land. where filling was necessary,
and the rock from the tunnel was car
ried over in a large iron bucket sus
pended from the cable. The laborers’
camp was located on top of the moun
ituin. and the men constructed "a 150-
foot ladder leading up the preeipitous
face of rocks from the mouth of the
'tunnel, and this ladder they ascended
' and descended many times a day.
VELVET BEANS FOR STOCK.
And as a Soil Renewer Take the Place
of Fertilizers.
Cam Young. a farmer of Lowndes
lcuunty, has planted 200 acres in vel
i vet beans and will fatten 300 head of
cattle on them. This is his remedy
lfm' low-price cotton. He says there
is much more money in ecattle raising
at the present price of beef, and the
velvet beans wiil renew the soil more
than tons of fertilizers. He believes
that a crop of velvet beans in a year
like this is worth their cost for the
good they do to the soil, even if they
were valueless for stock food
To Cure a Cold in One Day
take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
lets. All druggists refund the money
‘if it fails tocure. E. W. Grove’s sig
pature on each box.
The Dawson News. Wednesday, May 24, 1905.
Takes Pe-ru-na Every Spring.
Miss Tilly Marx, 421 14th St., Milwaukee, Wis.,
writes:
«1 am pleased to endorse Peruna, as T found it
very efficient in ridding my system of a severe cold
and catarrhal trouble, after I had tried many other
remedies without getting relief.
« [ took Peruna for two weeks, when I was much
better, and in two weeks more 1 was entirely rid of
the cold and catarrh. I shall take it every spring as
a tonic, as I found that it made me much better in
every way.”’—Tilly Marx.
spring weather. This renders medi
cines more effective,
A short course of Peruna, assisted by
the balmy air of spring, will cure old,
stubborn cases of catarrh that have re
sisted treatment for years.
A Word of Advice.
To those who have been afflicted with
chronic catarrh we wish to say that the
spring season affords you a splendid op
portunity to get rid of your disvase.
It may be you have been afflicted for
several years; you may have tried dif
ferent remedies, Perhaps you have be
come disconraged.
Now Is Your Opportunity.
This failure was during the winter
months., But now is your opportunity.
Nature comes to your assistance at this
season., :
Jugt help her a little and she will
bring you out of the quagmire in which
you have been floundering so long. Give
Nature a little assistance lest her strug
gler be in vain.
’THE COST OF THE BIG STICK
Tom Watson's Opinion of the India
Rubber Qualities of the
Monroe Doctrine.
‘““l'he India rubber gqualities of the
Monroe doctrine are being made man
ifest with a vengeance,’”’ says Tom
Watson in an editorial in his maga
zine for May.
“Once we understood it to mean, in
a ‘general way, that KEurope must
‘hands off’—no more conquest, colo
nization, or extension of the Kuropean
system on the American continent.
“By Mr. Clevelard England was
told, with firmness, that she couldn’t
steal Venezuela’s land, even though
the theft consisted of the simple device
of moving the boundary line.
“With Mr. Roosevelt’s advent to
power comes a decidedly new chapter
in the evolution of the Monroe doc
trine.
“We are to assume a sort of trus
teeship for adjacent governments.
““We must see to it that they conduct
themselves decently and in order.
They must pay their debts to citizens
of other countries and behave them
selves generally in a way that meets
our approval.
*‘Mr, Roosevelt, in advancing the
Monroe doctrine to this extent, has
undertaken a bigz contract for this
country.
“If we are to be the policemen for
South America, Santo Domingo, Cu
ba, Mexico and Central America we
must. first of all, have a powerful
navy.
““This is clear to everybody.
*“What is not so clear is that a
powerful standing army will inevitably
follow—as sure as fate it will follow.
“For it is eertain that a natural re
sult of our hectoring, bulldozing over
lord attitude toward countries like
those mentioned will make them our
bitter enemies. South America al
ready hates us: and has cause to hate
.
““The manner in which we sanctioned
the collection of claims against Ven
ezuela by the warships of Europe will
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic i
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A Typical Case.
Geo. M. Fillmore, late Ist Lieut. Brd
U. S. Artillery, writes from 909 L St., N.
W., Washington, D. é., as follows:
“I brought forward from winter into
spring a sickening case of catarrh which
was making existence miserable for me,
until I was induced to try a bottle of
Peruna.
¢“An immediate improvement gave me
hope, if not relief. Ikeptup taking Pe
runa and it has sq strengthened and re
lieved me that I am now confident of a
cure. I heartily endorse Peruna for ca
tarrhal affections and as a tonic for their
weakening effects.””—Geo. M. Fillmore.
A short course of Peruna now will
be just in time. During the month of
April you will find the strategic time to
rid yourself of chronic catarrh, one of
the most persistent, stubborn diseases
in the whole list of human ailments.
After you have tried it you will say‘
Peruna is positively the best spring
medicine you have ever used. |
not be forgotten.
““This feeling will be intensified by
Mr. Roosevelt’s recent utterances and
will spread through all the people
affected by it.
“If we are to compel these govern
ments to knuckle down to every as
phalt trust, or other speculative syn
dicate which enters the country for
the purpose of exploitation, the time
will certainly come when our attempts
to make them conform to our standard
of what is decent and orderly in deal
ing with plundering corporations will
be resisted. .
‘“What then?
“Our navy can bombard the cities
of the coast, but will our marines
leave the ships and defeat the land
forces of the interior? |
“‘Evidently not. ‘
““What, therefore, must we do? |
‘‘Send army against army, as we
shall have sent navy against navy.
“‘Consequently the same policy
which logically requires a powerful
navy will likewise require a powerful
standing army.
~ *‘And our masters know it.”’ '
Juggling With Dynamite. l
Is no more dangerous than to neg
lect kidney disorders. Foley’s Kid
ney Cure corrects irregularities and
has cured many severe cases after
other treatment has failed. It builds
up the worn out tissues and restores
health and vigor. ‘I was troubled
with kidney complaint for about two
years,’’ writes A. H. Davis of Mt.
Sterling Towa, but two bottles of Fo
leys’s Kidney Cure effected a perma
nent cure.”” For sale by Kendrick’s
Drag Store, Dawson, Ga., and Dr. H.
A. Wall, Bronwood, Ga.
Luminous Shrimps.
Luminous shrimps have recently been
discovered by the Prince of Monaco in
the course of his deep sea fishing in the
Mediterranean, says the I’aris corre
spondent of the London Telegraph.
They live at a depth of from 1,100 to
1,600 fathoms. They are of the size of
fine prawns and are studded with
small phosphorescent spots. These light
their way in the gloom of the deep wa
ters. Unfortunately the lights go out
when the shrimps are brought to the
surface and are of no use for illumi
nating an aquarium.
| A great many years of extensive trialg
of this remedy in this class of derange.
‘ments have demonstrated that there
i are no failures.
Thousands of Testimonials.
Thousands of cases might be quoted
in which Peruna has rescued peopls
from the ravages of spring catarrh, and
put them on a good, solid foundation of
health.
We can give our readers only a slight
glimpse of the vast array of unsolicited
endorsements Dr, Hartman is coa
stantly receiving. No other physician
ip the world has received such a volume
of enthusiastic letters of thanks.
1f you do notderive prompt and satis
factory results from the use of Peruns,
write at once to Dr, Hartman, giving &
full statement of your case and he will
be pleased to give you his valuable ad
vice gratis.
Address Dr., Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio. All correspondence held striclly
confidential.
R. E. BOWMAN. 1
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Bronwood, Ga. |
Office next to court house. All
calls promptly answered. |
O.T. KENYON, M. D. i
Offers his professional services :
to the people of Dawson and
surrcunding country. :
e
J. H. LEWIS, <
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. i
Dawson, Ga.
Office over Bell Bros. Phone
56. Residence phone 164%. g
H. W. HARRIS, M. D.
DAWSON, GA.
Office over P. O. Resi
dence at Mrs. L. C. Hoyl's,
Lee St. Office 'phone 214,
Residence 'phone 76. ‘”j
WERE AT
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When you want the
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A Sipx, Cxerain Reuey for SUPPRESEED MgnerßUS y:
NEVER KNOWN TO FAIL, Safe! Sur § Bpeecy paid
faction Guaracteed or Money Refunded. S¢%- 3 for
for $l.OO per box. Will send them on trial, to e P2O
when relieved. Samples Free. If your druggist 408 7
have them send your orders to the .
UNITED MEDICAL CO., BOX T 4, LANCASTER. =
Sold by Davidson & Baldwin:
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