The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, April 29, 1904, Image 7

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4D, o ’.‘z‘,}i‘., o b W . .3, 0_ e ; “'!_“..c bt o AR SR %f FR RSN oV {3 .‘;:“‘ PEE S e ~_¢‘D§ ‘of o '-\'\\’fi\ SAO -A-‘.v-lv AP IE I %0 &QA PR SRR N {3 e A RN i NG/ NN S e 3‘&"% ’\l N \W{ k- -,;;..,‘:f»x}‘., 'ew_«;{%t: . GTI A !A._i jz\fi;\xs'.%f\ Satn B> RRBI \ S e R R e I A A ] B - 1 j,,“‘; = ~ Dy The flavor of TOBACCO may be in jured by the use of stable and rank organic manures. in the form of sulphate produces an improved flavor and a good yield. Tobacco must have Potash. Our littie book, “Tobacco Culture,” con tains much valuable information, and every tobacco grower can obtain a copy free of charge Dy writing for it. GERMAN KAL!I WORKS New York—9B Nassau Street, or Atlanta, Ga.—22% 80. Broad St. A Large Trial Box and book of ins structions absolitely Free and Post= paid, enough to prove the value of o ° * Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic ) ¥ Paxtine is in powder T ey form to dissolve in . s water — non-poisonous . gD andfarsuperior to liguid P e antlse?t!cs containing o &; %4 alcohol which irritates }Ly 28 i‘:lflamed ‘surfafes, and ' R\®4 have no cleansing pro ;:f i ¢ ’é‘,f’é? )»g?_ ‘—-;'j‘f"’i‘_ erties, The congtgntp; AR oo ~’f of every box makes ! == S more Anptiseptic Solu- A £ SEMer | tion —Jasts longer— e &' . goes further—has more SR % uses in the family and Ve 7% doesmoregoodthanany N // antiseptic preparation i o you can buy, The formula of a noted Boston physician, used with great successas a Vaginal ash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal tarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. Inlocal treatment of female ills Paxtineis invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we challenge the world to produce its equal for throroughness. Itisarcvelationin cieansing and healing power; it kills all germs which cause inflammation and discharges. Ali leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, 50c. abox; if yoursdoes not, send to usfor it, Don’t take a substitute — thereisrothing like Paxtine. Write forthe Free IDox of Paxtinc to-day. R. PAXTON €)., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass. wa RYYE A 3 W. L. DOLGLA $4.00, 83.50, S3.CO, €2.50 UNION €520 EEST IV « MADE SHQES THE WORLD. W.L.Douglas shoes are worn b_\' more /[ A men than any other f=s . ‘)55% mgke. The reason 8599 lvw y hold their g=f ¥ %) cMape,fitbetter,wear ;;,,mt‘ £ longer, and have %@% : ek . e pe e RS greater Infrinsic s & value than any SNSEEY /Dy - EErin NN /S other shoes. W S A 2o 3 #!_m_,,\,v ‘. Sold Everywhere, i \‘A\my 72k ' Look fer name an:d pricé on bottom, Douglas uses Corona Coltskin, which is everywhere conceded tobethe finest Patent Leather ver produced. Fast Co or Eyrlets used Suoes by intl, 20 cents extra, Write for Catalog. W. L. DOUGLAK, Brocikton, Mass., :g‘:rfl‘\_ :»;fl' E v»"‘-%?;?‘n?‘%w 3 5 h Cl'jß D i \ X kog : le' es Eae O HE 3 : fil“.ck ; i e . Relisf, : R\ Removes all swelling in 8620 L~ TR days; effects a permanent cure [ / in 30to 6o days. Trialtreatment BT ;-, given free. Nothingean be fairer Gi I write [r. H. H. Green’s Sons, CHAEEIART gpecialists, Box B Atlanta. 3. b s B & &9 5 PEST FOR THE BOWELS _ \’ 4Y, =,‘ io, Y™ e 3 R . ol ) e(3 £7 B BOeh WV aR A 9 Vs e e SR A e EA S ) B B 2 E e . e Q% o A‘;fl o *:,.’5» Hi ' e B T L s e e e sQP Ny *31"?? GUG Gey ¢ (x . N ) R 4 P .("-, 3 \ F R N e N CANDY AN A A {7 N CATHARTIO A ; OA\ ¢ 's'\ Ry ‘ ":‘.‘“ ) =Yagraae o AL T & . 5 eAT :":' L ~"“.‘EEY "?,}‘" RN MY ‘s&.:}’-, GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, eppendicitis, bilioueness, bed breath, bad ; blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, R pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizzineas. When your bowels don’t move § regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together, It 8 starts chronic ailments and lo‘:f lyenra of suffering. No matter what ails you, start taking § CASCARETS tod:x, for you will never get well and otaze:nll until yea get your bowels B right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. The ruuim tablet stamped CC C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and booklet free. - Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 502 b 7 2N ee R e ) : ez L& S . e AP TR ( s '\ ~ M Miss Rose Peterson, Secre tary Parkdale Tennis Club, Chi cago, from experience advises all young girls who have pains and sickness peculiar to their sex, to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound. How many beautiful young Eir]s de velop into worn, listless and hopeless women, simply because sufficient atten tion has not been paid to thejr physical deve ent. No woman s exempt from"phiysical weakness and periodic pain, aBnd young girls just budding into womanhood should be earefully guided physically as well asmorally. Ancther woman, Miss Honnah E. Mershon, Col lingswood, N.J., says: “I thought I would write and tell you that, b{ following your kind ad vice, I feel like a new person. I was always thin and delicate, and so weak that I eould hardly doanything. Men struation was irregular. ‘I tried a bottle of your Vegetable Compound and began to feel better right away. I continued its use, and am now well and strong, and men struate regularly. Icannotsayenough for what your medicine did for me.” -~ §5OOO for;;it if orlginal of above lstier proving genulnensss cannot be procuced. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will cure any woman in the land who suffers from womb troubles, inlammation of the ovaries, ané kidney troubles. - WEATHERWISE 15 THE MAN WHO WEARS tOWERy ggé[lcfii R§ i gAggw N tati tendi \&%\5%"’.5‘2&.'2& years and ou \\#_] guarantee are back of \\\;‘;&fii\every garment bearing the O DY L _SIGN OF THE FISH. TR UQThere are many imitations YEAUNY__Be sure of the name \RE2 [\ TOWER on the button: /TSNNSO SALE: EVERYWHERE. |, " A.J. TOWER CO.BOSTON, MASS.U. 8. A. TOWER CANADIAN €O. Linited, TORONTO, CAN. @ ELECTRIC FLUID ‘ ) Thegreat pain extractor;cures 4Fa rheumatism, neuralgia, colie, - cramPs and all aches and pain. e Nothing like it. Try a bottle. : \ 7 ¥, Save doctor’s bilis.” Ask your 70/ druggist to get it, or send to w \ @l/ W. ¢. HUGHEN, Atlanta, ; &Y Ga. Agents wanted; big pay. Give the name of this paper when writing to advertisers—(AtlB-04) No information. “Yes, she tried to find out how much money her husband had in the bank.” “And did she learn?” “No, indeed. They wouldn’t let the bank teller.”—From Judge. ST CROY S A S Small Loss. “I'll trouble you to hand over your watch,” said the courteous footpad. “No trouble at all, I assure you,” returned the equally courteous citi zen. “It’s one of those dollar watches that’s guaranteed to run one year, and the year’s up.”—lndianapolis Sun. The Whole Story. Old Gentleman—‘“See here, young ster! Do you know what happens when little boys stay away from school?” . Little Boy—“ Sure! A god time, an’ den a spankin’.”—Philadelphia Led ger. IT ALL DEPENDS. Clara—Are you an optimist or a pes simist? Clarence—When I'm tired I'm a pes simist; when I'm rested I'm an optim {st.—Detroit Free Press. FlTSpermanently cured. No fits ornervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerveßastorer.®2trial bottleand treatisefree Dr.R. H. Kning, Ltd., 981 Arch Bt., Phila., Pa 1f the good die youn% what’s the matter with the parson who lives to a ripe old age? Use Allen’s Foot-Ease, It {s the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, apowder to be shaken into the shoes, Cures while gou walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25¢. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent Frer. Address,Allen 8, Olmsted, Leßoy, N.Y. One way-for a young man to make a hit with the girl’s father 18 to strike him for a loan. sy Pyg~naM FapELESS DYES color more goog brighter colors, with less work than others. With the exception of the girl’s father and the dog, all tEe world tolerates a lover. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forchiidren teething, soften the gums,reducesinflamma tion allays pain,cureswind colic. 25¢, abottle Some girls had rather flirt than eat and some do qnoth simultaneously. TamsurePiso’sCure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mzs. THOMAS RoB EINS, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1000, Other people’s troubles bore a man more than his own. To Improve Italian Railways. The Italian State rallways, accord ing to a report from Rome, will soon place orders for 200 locomotives and several thousand freight cars, %100 Reward. $lOO, The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all itsstages, and that is Catarrh. Hal P’s Catarrh Cure is thae only positive cure ncw known to the medical fraternity. Catarrhbeing a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s CatarrhCureistaken intes nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting pature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer Ome Hun dred Dollars forany case that it fails to ocure, Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Caexgy & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. oil in Trinidad. On the Island of Trinidad oil is found amid a huge tropical vegetation, and is said to be of first-class illumi nating power, O E R W S CREASEMTREISRIATSN 1 R T R o ARSI NI £ S AT Write us a postai 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 diseases on reql}cst. It will do all that we claim for it. Full directions with sample sent. Mention this pa%r. Address STUIRT DRUG M’'F’'G. CO., 28 Wall Street, ATLANTA. GA. R T s RES " ’ S g [ b Best Cough 8, astes Good. Use P % in time. Bord by drugglets. © A ' "CONSUMPTION v ROBINSON CRUSCE’S RESCUZL. Actual Facts of Selkirk’s Return to Scotland and to Clvilized Life. It was only after Selkirk had watch. ed from his familiar lookout, in fair weather and foul, for more than four yvears that he was finally rewarded by the sight of his old ship. When Cap tain Dampier landed upon the beach, Selkirk was already standing oa the edge of the forest, waving a whité flag. In honor of the visit, he word his last shirt, which he had carefully kept for years for this occasion. The captain afterward noted in his account that Selkirk spoke in a voice which, for all his pains, sounded scarcely hu man. His feet had been hardened like leather from long exposure. For many weeks he had refused to touch any liquor, nor had he any appetite for civilized foods. Selkirk greeted his old shipmates with a delight that may be imagined, and before leaving his island, he entertained the ship’s crew in his “house.” The island was visited but once by any ship during Selkirk's long exile. A Spanish ship once landed on the isl and a small company who caught a glimpse of Selkirk. In those days the Spanish were the deadly enemies of the English, and doubtless Selkirk had recognized the ship’s colors from his lookout, and drawn his own conclu sions. In the story of Crusoe, it will be remembered, Defoe makes much of this visit of the Spanish, and has them prostrate themseles before Crusoe as the “governor of the island.” As a matter of fact, however, Crusoe (or Selkirk) played a much less dignified part than Defoe would have us be lieve. The Spanish shot at and chased him for some distance without success. A bulldog which they had brought ashore was pressed into ser vice; but Selkirk, from his long train« ing with the goats, outran the bulldog. Growing tired of the chase Selkirk finally climbed a tree. The Spanish built a fire and camped near his hid ing place, but finally left without dis covering him. The solitude and many hardships of this lonely life would doubtless have driven most men crazy. Selkirk, hows ever, kept his wit throughout it all, and when he finally returned to Scot land, after an absence of eight years, was able to take up his old life where he had dropped it, and, despite his bar barous life, was still a civilized man.— From Francis Arnold Collin’s “Robin son Crusoe’s Island,” in St. Nicholas. “Women’s voices,” says the London Graphic, “are no longer low and sweet. Whether in trains, omnibuses, clubs, hotels or theatres, women talk loudly and sghrilly. They can be heard at the other end of the room, and the domes tic concerns of a purely personal na ture are being constantly overheard. The tones of the voice, too, are cer tainly deeper and gruffer.” We are glad to hear that the English ladies are losing their drawing-room voices. Until recently most of the ladies of England, and particularly of London, found speech exceedingly difficult ow ing to the excruciating tightness of fashion’s stays. Possibly the change which, apparently, has distressed the Graphic, is due to the advent of com mon-sense fashions and to that de lightful being commonly called the outdoor girl. A woman who plays golf, rows, rides, swims and lives largely in the open air is bound to breathe, and breathing deepens the voice and gives it power. Here in America we have feminine voices that do not stop at “the other end of the room,” they can be heard at the other end of the golf links, and there is nothing shrill or harsh about them, either. In fact, abundant testimony may be had that they are rich and musical. Our American girls find lung culture beneficial to the voice, to the complexion, and to the general health. Heavy embroidery, but always open work and cut work, is in great demand. Those long gloves of violet kid strike a new note with the white er violet dress.