The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, June 03, 1904, Image 7

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Cotton Must Have l Potash is an essential plant food l which must be added as a fertilizer groa or the soil will i ¥iadt become ex- I : prod hausted, as isi || SR true of so‘ | SR ,h‘s‘j” : many cotton 0 ,fl SATNS field:‘. YRR oo We have books 3 ,:‘."' ix 5‘{":?.%;—:.:}13 giving valuable de & ffi\ SRR tails about fertiliz : TS ers. We will send them free to any farmer who asks us for them. GERTIMAN KALI WORKS, New York =2B Nassau Sireet, or Atlanta, Ga.——22% So. Broad St. A Large Trial Box and book of iite structions absolutely Free and Post= paid, enough to prove the value of PaxtineToilet Antiseptic Rk Paxtine is in powder P form to dissolve in AT water — non-poisonous Ao PR\ and farsuperior toliGuid (RN S mtlse?tlcs containing A o\ alcohol which irritates 5} z R S I:flamed ‘suflaces, and e 7 et have no cleansing pro NG S3O erties. The Cerntents SE .. At of every box makes e <~ gas more Antiseptic Solu- Vs g 9 tion —lasts longer— DA : jjfl goes further—has more 8% @ uses in the family and // 3 do:ismo‘r’egoodthan:iny : - antiseptic ration TN you s buylz“pa The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. Inlocal treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we % challonie the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. Itisarevelationin cleansing and healing power; it kills all germs which cause inflammation and discharges. All leading druggists keep Paxtine; grice,soc. &box; if yoursdoes not, send to us for it. Don’t take a substitute — thereisnothing like Paxtine. Write forthe Free Box of Paxtine to-day. RB. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass. . Our Latest Im & lar Saw Mills, with Hege’s Universal Log Beams, Rectilin ear, Simultaneous B¢t Worksand the Hea coc&tzfiing Variable Feed Works are unex-§ celled for ACOURACY, SIMPLICITY, DUBABIL ITY AND EASE OF QPERATION. Write for full descrifitive eirculars. Manufactured by the SALEM IRON WORKS,Winseton-Salem,N.C. 21 tried all kinds of blood remedies which failed g 0 do me any good but I have found the right thing ;t last. My face was full of pimples and black oads. After taking Cascarets they all left. 1 am continuing the use of them and regommending them to my friends. I feel fine wben fr!se ‘n the morning. Hope to have a chance to recommend Cascarete.” Fred C. Witten, 76 Elm St., Newark, N. J, y 0 1 Dest For : gy The Dowels 5 AR AR RO ] €, > CANDY CATHARTIC v 2D P a ! oL ~E:Yt‘!(JRI(‘J»'r!l A Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Da Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10¢, 25¢, 50¢. Never sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCOC, Guarantoed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or N.Y. 505 ANNUAL SALE, TEM MILLION BOXES v > £, CURED N Gives = o Quick ' : Relisf. A Removes all swelling in Bto2o - days; effects a permanent cure e in 20to 6o days. Trialtreatment % N /R givenfree. Nothingcan be fairer To 1L Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons, {3 it AT ZAANT gpnocialists, Box B Atlanta. 3%, ° . This is What Yon Want ! - Have You Any Malartal Troubles ? Do yon want to get well and get ? send a Postoflice order feor ?irlityg:en‘:gloqtlggk # ' REGAL MEDIGINE E0.,0f Stamford, Conn., for medicine and directions. A quick and certain cure guaranteed in all cases of malaria, chills and fover,dumb ague and intermittent fever. What Is the King? The Hereros, now in rebellion against Germany, have a pretiy fair opinion of themselves and of their chief. One of their songs Degins: “What is the king of England, what is the king of Germaay compared with thee, O, Mahereo, first among all princes? Have they so many thousand cattle as thou? No! Who is so mighty as thou? "‘Ne! Who is so mighty as thou?” The Hereros dospise Europe ans. The name for a European is “Oty irumbo”—*white thing.” TIME TO ACT, When the back aches and you are al ways tired out, depressed and nervous —when sleep is disturbed by pain and ST by urinary A ‘ ills, it’s timae LSRR i to act, The r’fl”a\‘?«:flg?‘*?fi%‘ kidneys are PR ST T o Doan' %, \f‘v{‘;‘,‘.; :A%j_"f‘f\ sick., Doan'y 1N / \i, "‘-:jq'i‘ Kidney Pillu g A WA “/‘slss‘;@«&; cure- sick L e e kidney s RS RaNe B ] quickly and B ) B 14\"?3: permanent- W idea v e 5 EFSreagLngf PTOO £ : il S e Mrs. W. S, S/ Marshall, R, ey’ ID, No 'éw 1, Dawson, Ga., says: “My husband’s back and hips were so stiff and sore that he could not get up from a chair without help. I got him a bex of Doan’s Kid ney Pills. He felt relief in three days. One box cured him.” “ A FREE TRIAL of this great kid ney medicine which cured Mr. Mar shall will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Ad dress Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers; price 50 centd per box, “Why is he called the unspeakable Turk?” “My dear, the reasons are unprint able.” After listening to a poor young man’s tale of woe it’s up to the heiress to give him a helping hand. : Use Allen’s Foot-Ease. It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Achjng, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and Bunions. Ask ior Allen’s Foot-Ease, apowder to be shaken into the shoes. Cure: while you walk, At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25¢. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent Frer. Address,Allen 8, Olmsted, Leßoy, N.Y Trust not the woman that thinketh more of herself than another. Mercy will not dwell in her heart. Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forehildran teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma iion allaysrain,cureswind colie. 25¢. abottls It is difficult to give a long headed man the short end of a deal. TamsurePiso’sCure forConsumptionsaved my life three years ago.—Mßgs. THoxas RoB EINs, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1900. A man seldom forgets a faver he does another. THE YONKERS COMPLEXION. She—That new boarder who came today has a beautiful olive complex ion. He—Well, after she’s been here a few weeks I guess she’ll have a prune complexion.—Yonkers Statesman. ——’m . ’ . Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry Cordial The Great Southern Remedy. Cures all Stomach and Bowel Troubles, such as Chronic Dysentery, Cholera Mor bus, Bloody Flux, and also children teething. It seldom fails to make quick and permanent cures of all stomach ard Paowel diseases. See testimonial of the te HENRY W. GRADY. Dr. Waiter A. Taylor, Atlanta, Ga. Dear Sir: This Is the first certifcate that | have ever glven as to the merits of any medicine, but | take pleasure In recommending Dr. Blggers’ Huckleberry Coralal. 1| consider It the best remedy that | have ever used In my family for Stomach and Bowel Troubkles. 50c In vested in a bottle of this medicine to be used in the beginning of any stomach trouble wili often save life as well as a large doctor’s bill. | have a friend whose life was, In my opinion, saved by the prempt use of Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry Cordial. For sale by all Druggists, 25 and 50¢ per bottie. (Signed) HENRY W. GRADY. Atlanta, Ga., May 23, 1887. Haltiwanger-Taylor Drug Co., Prep., Atlanta, Ga. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup and Consumption. Price 25cand$l1 abottle. ROSES dF.OLD CHIOS. Queen of Fiowers Had a Unique Dis \ tinction in Ancient Greece. Although + the rose is so popular throughout all the world now that great fortunes are being earned by growers everywhere, the quéen of the flowers does not enjoy the unique posis tion that she held in anclent Greece. The love of the old Greeks, and particularly the Athenians, for the rose was almost akin to worship, and many a high liver in those days has gone down in history as having spent his whole patrimony in roses for feasts. The Greeks knew nearly all the general varieties of roses that are known to us, both simgle and double blossoms, and big tracts of land were taken out of the grain and food pro ducing area in order to grow roses. The old island of Chios was almost entirely an islapd of roses, and to those who approached it from the sea it presented the appearance of a gi gantic bouaquet of red and white and vellow blooms, with the shining white pillars of temples and villas gleam ing from the splendor of the flowers. Shipleads of roses were sent to Athens every day from Chios. That was probably the most beautiful freight that ever went by sea since the world began, and it must have been a glorious sight to see the gal leys, all decked with flowers, steering over the blue Aegean sea. Roses were used for emblems of joy and sorrow, for iriumph and de feat. A wreath of roses ornamented tbe bride, and wreaths of roses decked those who were going to their graves. The victor entered cities over a path of roses, and wherever he trod during his triumphal march, the blossoms formed a carpet for his feet. In-old Rome, too, the rose was con sidered the most precious of flowers. On May 28 a great rose feast used to begin in Rome in memory of the dead, and for a week or more the cemeter ies were literally overwheimed with the flowers. In the great item of im perial Rome the guests at big feasts sat on rose petals that were piled high around them. The floor was car peted with them and men vied with each other to find new and extrava gant uses for the beloved flowers. For oene single banquet Nero im ported $125,000 worth of roses from Alexandria.—Washington Post. INACTIVITY KILLS INTELLIGENCE With Animals Brains and Mobility Go Together. Among animals it is very largely true that mobility and ‘‘brains’” go to gether where others things are fairly equal. There are some creatures, like th house fly, in which everything else seems to have been sacrificed to secure locomotive powers of an extraordinary character. But, as a rule, the mam mal which can travel to seek its food or change its abode is distinctly mors intelligent than the more sedentary and stay at home species, Motion, also suggests versatility as well. Rabbits are, on the wheie the most stay at home of any of our rodents. If left to themselves they would never move further from the mouths of their bur rows than to the edge of the nearest piece of grass, and it grass reaches up to the burrow itseif, they merely edge forward, eating a fresh slice every day, like a mowing machine being pushed backward and forward. The result has been bad for rabbits’ brains. Their cousins, the hares, though our English race has never thought of making a burrow except in snow time, are far more intelligent. One of Cowper’'s tame hares would give him plainly to understand when it wanted him to come into the garden, and licked his hand after he had b¢en at pains to take care of it during illne3s. Thera is no doubt that the domestic pig has lost nearly all its orginal and large stock of brains owing to long confinement in sties and a steady course of breeding for the ideal ham or an approach to perfection in ribs of bacon. The New Forest and Sherwood Forest pigs were highly active, and consequently highly intelligent. They usei to come home regularly at the sound of a horn to be fed, assembling from all parts of the forest within hearing. These admirable animals have recently afforded two examples of the connection between mobility and brains which, though not intended as scientific experiments, will doubtless be welcome to philosophers. In the one case, the Sherwood Forest pigs, which had retained their mobility, were excluded by a cruel law from the en joyment of a free range in the woods about the time when acorns and beech mast are most toothsome, and when their connections in Spain, under a happier dispensation, are enjoying those peculiarly large and delicious acorns which make the real foundation of Spanish hams. The pigs always found a means to escape from their sties into the forest, and were so full of resource that their owners basely procured the degeneration of the whole race by making them less mobile by crossing them with a particularly fat and lazy class of pig from Naples. On the other hand, it was found, we be lieve, by the Austrian Government in Bosnia, that the round and snub-nosed Berkshire pig, which connoisseurs had gradually bred as a degenerate in mind ard mentally quite incapable of tak ing care of itself. Accordingly, the authorities informed their agents that a long-legged pig was indispensable for their needs if the government stock was to flourish and impress the natives of the annexed provinces, and the an imal required was procured from Ire land.—The Spectator. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. It is only necessary to boil a cork for five minutes to make it fit any bottle. Engaged lovers in the Canary Isl ands find it difficult to exchange sweet confldences, as the young man is not allowed to visit his flancee in her home. A policeaman told a Greenwich (Lon don) magistrate that the prisoner “came up to him and asked him to hold a lamppost til he went past, as it kept moving.” The Japanese are noted for long noses; therefore they ara considered a mark of beauty. A Japanése girl with an unusually prom:inent nose is considered a belle. The most popular stockings in Pa ris just now are those made like a glove, with a separate compartment for each toe. It is said they prevent corns, and ease them if they already exist. In Japanese prisons the punish ment known as water torture is often rescrted to. The prisoner is confined in a closet too small for him to stir. ‘While he stands, water, one drop at a time is allowed to fall from a fau cet on his head. Few persons can en dure this punishment longer than rour days. Why Peonle Stammer. Stammering depends on a want of harmony between the action of the muscles (chiefly abdominal) which ex pel air through the larynx and that of the muscles which guard the orifice by which it escapes with that of those which modulate the sound to the form of speech. Over either of the groups of muscles by itself a stammerer may have as much power as other people, but he cannot harmoniously arrange their conioint action. Nervousness is a frequent cause of stammering. It is possible that the defect in some in stances may result from malformation of the parts about the bagk of the mouth. The fact that stammering people are able to sing -their words better than to speak them has been usually explained on the supposition that in singing the glottis is kept open so that there is less liability to spas modic action. Education costs $165,000 and religious sacrifices $186,000 a year in Korea.