The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, April 01, 1904, Image 3

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HAPPY WOMEN.,' Wouldn't any woman be happy, After years of backache suffering, Days of misery, nights of unrest, The distress of urinary troubles, She finds relief and cure? No reason why any reader Should suffer in the face of evidence ‘dike this: Mrs. Almira A. Jackson, of East : Front St., Traverse City, Mich., says: "l “For twenty % years I never T knew what it 'gjj[% e - was to have £ = .% Si good health, : p== het®we, LEvery physi ‘ l&l “" [#F cian consulted i b AN . said Ihad liver : ‘}’f_’r\*’t‘ N fi‘:’ X 7 trouble, but : lflN S 3&3‘ their medicines m{ ',';/7‘:" : did me nogood. A (e Just before I N }//,’/f ® began using 4%’ Doan’s Kidney Nt Pills I was al #most paralyzed. I could hardly stand «on my feet because of the numbness -and lack of circulation. Had a knife been thrust into my kidneys the pain «~gcould not have been more intense. My ~sleep was disturbed by visions of dis vtorted figures. The kidney secretions “were annoyingly irregular, and I was “tortured with thirst and always “bloated. I used seven boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills. The bloating subsided ~until I weighed 100 pounds less, could -sleep like a child and was relieved of ~the pain and the irregularity of the “kidney action. My circulation is good - and I feel better in every way.” A free trial of this great kidney med i icine which cured Mrs. Jackson will be -mailed on application to any part of ~4the United States. Address Foster . Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, Y. For sale +by all druggists; price 50 cents per box. i Cupid’'s Rehearsal, He—You didn’t seem startled when *q proposed to you. She—No; I have so often dreamed :that you proposed to me.—Detroit . ¥ree Press. | e ELECTRIC FLUID. j A | Thegreat pain extractor; cures % rheumatism, neuralgis, eolic, : “y crampsand all aches and pain. \ Nothing like it. Try a bottle. ‘ .\‘.fl"'v Save doctor’s bills. Ask your ) @T.//%), druggist to et it, or send to b/ \ 87N W, ¢. HUGHEN, Atlanta, % Ga. Agents wanted; big pay. T iRt g 8 N $ R- RANUM without pain, plaster, : L) AP Gk or knife; also positively curea SR RN St 1, onic blood disesses and Con- T e Biracd Aver, Philads., Po e.el =~ 2977 a 4 vTSNTGeDAST L Y S e Ty e SRR ae AR a 7 o ol G ST Y = T o= 7% qF "l &i g {)}‘ ¥ '¥*)“§ figf ?’f} . ,;!—J ‘i“’; ;'«”g'f _‘ »‘ o ‘:.. .- :" ”r :*: :T : j;;. g* A _‘»::' ‘ ‘;_ J§ 3i * f;; f B M .~:f~.'-,y;. - S . F=—" | RIFLE @ PISTOL CARTRIDGES i 8 * It's the shots that hit that count. ”” Winchester ’ 'l.: ‘ '-. i - - - . - - | ;95- = § Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that Is, A \‘J.,l’."i : . ' 178 they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene : g’—i— trating blow. This is the kind of cartridges you will get, | .}: s=z=== if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make. erm=mm=m=—fl ALI, DEALERS SELL WINCHESTER MAXE OF CARTRIDGES. Vi BY A $5,000 Latttons Epatanteed s TS AR, MR § A LIMITED MEANS OR EDUCATION NO HINDRANCE. ALL OUR 6,000 GRADUATES AT WORK. R. R. FARE PAID, WRITE TODAY TO INTZNZNTNTNTNT XL 3in, High, 30 Cents per Rod 60in. High, 50 Cents \ . er Rod. e L ‘ o ! PN LS L S ik 48in. High, 40 Cents per Rod. 72in, High, 80 Cents per Rod :::::_':':':':' 10 Rods or 165 feet in one roll. No order taken A'A'A'A?'A'A' for less than 10 Rods. This is not a cheap net :!:!fi!:-fi;g}' ting, but is a strong Fence made out of No. 19 ::::::::::A::: heavy galvanized wire reinforced every 12 inches, A'A'A‘"A'A"%A' Pouitry and Rabbit raising pays better than cot “":“::::"A::: ton. Send cash with order for 3 Rolls, men :'::':"A'A.A'A' tion this paper, and we will prepay freight. ANDERSON HARDWARE GO., ATLANTA, GEORGIA. Consliderate Man. “Yes,” said the meek little woman, “l consider my husband one of the most considerate men in our suburb.” “But I thought you said he scolded you if breakfast was late?” “He does, but he always closes the doors and windows before he begins, so none of the neighbors can hear.”— Cincinnati Times-Star. Burns—So your new play was per formed last night? Was there a call for the author? : | Plotter—There was no general de mand for his appearance, but I heard one or two men say they'd like to see the man who wrote it. I didn’t like the way they said it and got out of the house as soon as I could.—Bos ton Transcript. The United States furnished $80,000,- 000 of the $293,000,000 worth of gold which the world produced in 1902. Colorado produced $28,000,000, Cali fornia $16,000,000 and Alaska §58,000,- 000. Deafness Cannot Be Cured : by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of theear. Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. Whenthis tube is in flamed you have a rumblingsound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine 6ases out of ten are caused by eatarrh,which is nothing butan inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any . case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure, Send for circulars free. F.J. CreNEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Dru%gists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Within the last few years the various - colonies of Europeans in Egypt have ~ built their own hospitals. There are now in Cairo French, German, Aus trian, Anglo-American and Italian bos itals. SR B YOS O 0 T Y VRS ST RTR QBN e e Write us a postal card for a free sample of | STUART'S GIN AND BUCHU. We cheerfully send it to all sufferers of Kid ney, Liver, Heart, Bladder and Blood diseasez on reguest. It will do all that we claim for it. | Full directions with sample sent. Mention | this paper. Address STUART DRUG M'F'G. | CO.. 28 Wall Streer, ATLANTA, GA. ; g ) :l E | The Del.oach Patent Varlabie Friction Feed Saw Mill with 4 h. p. cuts 2,000 fect per day. All sizes and prices to suit. Deloach Shingle Mills | Edgers, Trimmrers, Planers; Corn and Buhi Mills, Water Wheels, Lath Mills, Wood Saws. | Our handsome new Cataloy will interest you | DeLoach Mill Mfg. Co. Box 834, Atlanta. G 2 ANCIENT ENGLISH INNS. Some Have Been in Existence for Nearly a Thousand Years. Somebhow one always kears with re great that one of England’s famous ol moss-grown, ivy-clad -inns is about t be demolished. . The Old King of Prus sia hostelry is the latest to pass intc the housebreaker's hands. This ol inm is in Finchley, and from 1757 when the piace was built, until th: present day, the license has been i 1 the keping of one family--perhaps & record in the licensing annals of Eng land, i The Old King of Prussia is a pic turesque half-timbered house, and many a noted highwayman has par taken of its hospitality. The grand: father of the present proprietor was quite a noted character, having van quished several notorious highwaymen on Finchley common. It is on record that he once had an encounter with Dick Turpin. Round and about London and its ever extending suburbs there may still be seen inns and taverns of great age and interesting associations. The Angel inn, Highgate hill, dates back to the time of the Reformation. Originally it was called .the Salutation inn. It is built entirely of wood. Another famous inn is the Bald- Faced Stag, at Edgware. Nobody knows when_it was originally built, and it would seem as though each successive provrietor had endeavored to place his mark on itg architectural aspect, for many parts of it have evidently at different times been rebuilt. In the stables, it is alleged, Dick Turpin had his horse’s shoes turned, sc as to make his pursuers imagine he had gone in an opposite direction. Among the very oldest of suburban ILondon inns are the Plough, at Kings bury Green, and the King James and Tinker inn, at Enfield. The first is said to be 850 years old, and the latter was reputed to have been first built as an inn and under another name 992 years ago. Its present name is derived from an encounter which King James I. is said to have had with a tinker at the door of the inn. The tinker’s conversation go pleased the king that he made the mender of kettles “a Knight, with five hundred a year,” the records of En field inform us.—London Daily Mail. FIRST SIGHT OF A MANATEE. Strange Sea Monster Seen Off the Florida Coast. A sight that is getting more and more rare now is that of a manatee or sea cow—the wonderful mammal that lives exclusively in the water like a fish, and that has furnished the foun dation of many a mermaid story by thrusting its head and shoulders out of the ocean near shore juzt in time to let a startled crew see it. “I shall never forget the scare I got at the first sight of a manatee,” said John Mansfield, the angler. “It waslast year in the Indian river in Florida. My boat was anchored near a bank of grasses and I was lolling in the stern, looking.idly down into the water and thinking of anything except a sea mon ster, when suddenly a vast form made me pull my head back instinctively. “The thing was so dark that it looked almost black. It was shaped like a huge, thick carrot, only instead of the thin tail of a carrot it had a broad, flat tail exactly like that of a lobster. “It came along smoothly and silent ly, gliding close along the bottom, and at first I couldn’t see any head at all. It looked weird, and 1 couldn’t imagine what it was. “Suddenly it bent that big lobster tail backward, doubled it beneath it self, and instantly its progress stopped as if it had put on brakes. “The next moment the thing was apparently standing straight up omn end. Then I saw two bony things like arms shoot out from the upper part of its body and the thing began -to bob back and forth like a very clumsy person trying to make funny little bows. “Then I realized that what 1 was looking at was a manatee, or sea COWjy and that it was in the act of feeding. A big bunch of river gress grew just where it had stopped and it was talk. ng it down in .great mouthfuls. “I now saw that it had a head, sure :nough, although it was a most ab surdly small head, looking like a lit le cord in a big, fat bottle. But the nost remarkable thing about the head vas the mouth. : “The lower jaw was all right. It vas like that of a seal. But the up per jaw was split vertically so that it )pened like the upper lip of a rabbit. t was a true hare lip, only it was thout 40 times as big as the worst ware lip that ever was on dry land. “With the queer upper lip the mana tee seized the big wisps of river grass, and handied them as an elephant would handle hay with his trunk. Then the lower jaw would shoot out and yank it into the cavernous mouth. It was a great sight—the funny mouth, the tiny head, the huge body, twice as big around as that of a man, and about as long; the rough hide, the tiny flip pers and the lobster tail—a veritable cross between a cow and a seal, and a fish and a waterbug.”—Washington Post. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. e The secret of success is constancy of purpose.—Lord Beaconsfield. There is just as much danger in the riches you desire as in those you pos sess, Your grip on success depends large ly on the things yeu are willing to let go. They are never alone that are ac companied with noble thoughts.—Sir Philip Sidney. Women’s counsel may not be worth much, but he who despiseth it is not wiser than he should be.—Amelia E. Barr. If you wish to appear agreeable in society, you must consent to be taught many things which you already know. —Talleyrand. Do not attempt to do a thing unless you are sure of yourself, but do not relinquish it simply because some one else is not sure of you.—Stewart Ed ward White. ; We are firm believers in the maxim, that, for all right judgment of any man or anything, it is useful, nay, es sential, to see his good quaiities be fore pronouncing on his bad.—Thomas Carlyle. Grant nie (o become beautiful in the inner man, said Socrates, and that whatever outward things I have may be at peace with those within. May I deem the wise man rich, and may I have such a portion of wealth as none ‘but a prudent man can bear use. This is prayer enough for me. Marriage in Canada W. S. Harwood in The World today for February gives the reasons for the rareness of divorce in Canada. It is serious business getting married in Canada. To marry in Canada is to look the future in the face. It is to consider something besides affection. The future must be considered as well as the present, the future with its man ifold perplexities, with its question ings, and its doubts; for to marry in Canada means in very truth, “until death Jdo us part.” To what extent the spread of divorce in the United States ig due to hasty marriages would be impossible to ascertain, so many and so varied are the reasons assigned for securing divorce, but it seems in controvertible that if people about to marry fully realized that they were to be married for life; that only a narrow grave might ~come between them; that it would not be possible for them to annul the marriage con tract on any of the trivial grounds which now are tenable—with such an understanding, it is incontrovertible that there would be far more ante nuptial thought of the {uture than there is at present. Switzerland is inaugurating a sys tem of itinerant school teachers, who will visit and spend some time in the isolated outlying villages,