The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, June 10, 1904, Image 2

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DR. WOOLLEY'S Will cure permanently at your own home, 8“. T. M. Brown, of DeQueen, Ark., says: “Over te\{en'yours ago I was cured of the Q mlla habit by your medicine, and have con t&ue in the very best of aealth since.” r. W. M. Tunstall. of Lovingston, Va., eays: “lam l(lud to gay that I irmly belleve that I am entirely and jermanently cured of the Drink Habit, a 4 I have never even 80 much a 8 wanted a drink in any form since I took {our eradicator, now 18 months ago. It was )fibout money I ever invested,” rs. Vh&inlu Townsend, of Shreveport, lLa., writes: “No more opium. I have taken no other remedy thap yours, and 'make no mis take when 1 say fhnz m(y health {8 better now than it gver wasin my Hfe,and [ owe it to you and your remedy. It has been twolve years since I was cured b{ your treatment.” Dr. Woolley has thousands of such testimon falg, with permission to use them. A treat ?ent with so many recommendations from }!lleunu and cured ‘mtivnt‘t must be good. r. Woolley’s Antidote has imitators, (as llln?ood articles have)—perhaps you have tried sonie of them, but there is nothing like Wool loy's. It has stood the test of thirty years. No man or woman who uses (’)Ylum or whiskey in any form, or who has friends so affiicted should hesitate to write to DR. B. M. WOOLLEY, 106 North ¥Fryor Street, Atlanta, Ga., for his book oh these diseases, which he will send free and confidential. ® * GUARAN ottt INeD BY A $5 ,000 Railroad Fare Paid. 500 FREE Courses Offered. I Board at Cost. Write Quick GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE,Macon,Ga. SUCCESSORS TOO AVERY & McMILLAN, 881-58 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga —ALL KINDS OF— MACHINERY O 0.0 Res ot ll‘ i _f.‘. Q‘ R J&:\u\.)' - ‘ S (1 e RN BT B e R //_ T p, W i I: -—4*"(‘4“:;\‘ ,h"l‘ ‘ v BT e~ I\ WA~ s S\ L N | /AN fv o Vil W J-:'».j»f X 3k '4 \h‘.’., o g w”/‘! ;-??’\‘4 & \\ (4443 ;’*3 S e e e /\1 NS Reliable Frick Engines, Bollers, all : Sizes. Wheat Separators, ; 2% ] . i Y (| et \ k A I P— o & b 0 TR '&-‘-;:-1_;_,’?‘.".;; ~ ;:.;’.;.-'?{’tzztf;« | ¥R ¢ ‘\“3\’::.\:-.:fl.ti-,-«.—“."_»:".‘,;i;.‘i{s&;:;.\._zy_fg;t;;yfi g iy ‘ v""i;;;;:"_u;.»fi‘*:t‘ ':;.v;‘wl_ \'j:':'g:f:\;*“. ".':'l‘_;;“;g:“ RS R AR L S g AL, e Ty '»i‘\, B s bt A 0 e o “.f,.“,f"' E Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingie Mills, Corn Mills, Clrcular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Bteam Governors, Full |ine Engines & Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. A Large Trial Box and book of ine structions abgsoiutely Free and Post paid, enough to prove the value of Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic A Paxtine is in powder g e e, form to dissolve in L gg \’Q\% wnger- non-poisclnm;: R R andfarsuperiortoliqu FEREEY e\ antiscgflcs containing AL ’ *“‘%a alcohol which irritates i ’ by R fi‘fi ll:xflamed ‘surfaces, and & & TR ave no cleansing prop ; ¢ @ "&\;N,.,,‘ erties. The contents ¥ A q. A Y of every box makes \ <~ B &2 more Antiseptic Solu- Y Bwey.| tion — lasts longer— \ goes further—has more g 8 uses in the family and CRRY / doe!smorlcgoodthanainy > antiseptic preparation ’ \; = you can buy, ’ The formula of a noted Boston physician, and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrhaea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. Inlocal treatnisnt of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. L's\\. as a Vaginal Wash we challonfie 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; price, 50c. abox; if yoursdoesnot, send to us for it, Don’t take a substitute — there isnothing like Paxtine, + Writeforthe Froe Box of Paxtine to-day. *R. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass. For SpecifiocOphtha!mia NoMoreßlindHorses: .. s udnem & othor Bore Eyes, Barry Co,, lowa City, la.,have a sure cure ~ Girls, Please Don't. Apply the stilted language of the novel heroine to your every day iife. Make yourselves felt as the tyrants of the household. Let other giris know how peculiar your brother ig in the handling of money. Imagine that men never grow tired of being treated as inferiors. Throw out hints of how easy you ex pect to take life after marriage. . Do the ‘“grand” because you hap pen to meet some ordinary persons. Tell a man he is ‘“cranky” if he chooses to think for himself occa sionally. Suppose the world regarde you as pious becausz you attend church. Center and Periphery. The man from Seattle, who was’ vis iting his Boston cousin, took occa sion to contrast the two cities. “You people here arg so slow,” he gald. “You ought to come to our town and get your eyes open. We make more progress in one year than you do in ten.” “That is merely a familiar optical illugion,”»replied the Boston cousin, with impressive dignity.. ‘“The speed with which you seem to move in a forward direction is due to your re mote position from the hub.” One Thing More to Show. For two hours a fashionable lady kept the draper exhibiting his goods, and at the end of that period she sweetly asked: “Are you sure you ‘have shown me everything you have?” . “No, madam,” said the draper, “I have yet an old account in my ledger I'll gladly show you.” He did not need to show any more. —New Yorker. QOost of Haullng Freight, The cost of hauling a ton of freight a mile on Great Britain’s greatest rail way 1s 1.45 cents; on the Pennsylvania, forty cents, and on the New York Cen tral, forty-one cents. $lOO Reward. %100, The readers of this lia.per will he pleasedto learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to curs in all {tsstages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’'s CatarrhCuvels takeninter nally, aoting direotly 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 nature in doing its work. The proprietors haveso much faithin its eurative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars forany case that it fails to curs. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Caexexy & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Dru%gists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. > The Teacher Interested. “Miss Biggs Is interested in you, pa” "How sol “Why, to-day, after gshe had told me seven times to sit dotvn and behave myself, she said she wondered what sort of a father I had.” Teot Hurt, Sweat, iteh, blister? Rovarn Foor Wasw cures them, Removes odors of feet, armpits, ote.; stops chafing. If not at druggists send 2560 to EaTroNn Drua Co., Atlanta, Ga., for full size, postpaid; sample for 2¢ stamp. One application proves its merit. Money back if not satisfled. Invested in Corea. Americans have between $10,000,000 and $20,000,000 invested in Corea. Five millions are in very rich gold mines. Dr. King’s Royal Germetuer Kills the germs of disease and thus pre vents and cures all diseases of the blood, stomach, bowels, kidneys and nerves. J. J. Seruggs, Sidon, Miss., says: “Our little girl, 9 months old, was in a very low state from summer complaint and Germetuer made her as fat as a pig.” Booklet free. Write Germetuer Medical Co., Dept. C., Barnesville, Ga. Miss Wolf has sued the school board at Salina, Kan., for locking her out of the schoolhouse. Kansas has had long experience in keeping the Wolf from the door. JAPANESE INVENTIONS. Bastorn Race Originators of Several Life Saving Devices. We are in debt {o the Japanese for at least three notable discoveries, two of which have already saved many European lives, says the London Academy. The oldest of these is the discovery by Kitasato, a Japanesa bac -teriologist, of the bacillus.ihat causes lockjaw, or tetanus, leading to the production of an _antijogin serum which is now regularly used and is by far the most efficient remedy we possess for this terrible disease. A Japanese obscrver named Shiga has recently discovered the bacillus which causes. a great many cases of dysentery, and, though that discovery" has not yet led to any improvem<ont in prevention or treatment, and will therefore not lower, during this strug gle, the death rate from that dire foe of the soldier in wartime, no one doubts that this is the first step to ward our conirol of andther deadly disease. ‘ The third discovery is really more interesting, because it raises newer problems. There is in the body of "each of us a pair of organs Known as the adrenal.glands yet unknown to the public, though life could not con tinue without them. It was a Japan ese chemist, Takamine, who isolated from these glands the-invaluable sub stance which they ‘produce for the benefit of the rest of the body. It is known as adrenalin, and nearly every sample of it, prepared by a good firm bears upon. it the name of that dis tinguishcg Japanese. It is the most powerful of all chemical agents for stopping hemorrhage. It will arrest bleeding from the nose when every thing else has failed; not that that much matters, for the nose is acces sible to mechanical means, but adre nalin has already saved many lives that were oozing away in a thin red stream no surgeon could reach. WHEN THE BODY GROWS SHORT. People Lose Three Inches From Their Height Between 50 and 90. “What are the proportions of the ideal humaa body?” The vexed ques tion has never beem answered conclu sively. A corollary of it is this: “What are the proportions of the average healthy man or woman as we find them?” Not even to this has a reply been given. However, we are approaching it. Beientists have made myriads of measurements of the stature of man, and some.of theme arg quoted by Fleet Surgeon Williams in the an nual report on the health of the navy, just issued. To begin with the boy when born is half an inch taller than the girl The difference is maintained until near the age of 13, when in this coun try and America, the average girl is taller and heavier than the boy. This halting, so to speak, on the part of the male is speedily recovered, and he again outruns the female in size. At the period of full development, the man’s average height, compared with the woman’s average, is as 16 to 15. Both men and women maintain their maximum height until the age of fifty years, when they begin to grow shorter, until at 90 they have lost three inches. The reason for this dwindling is at tributed to the sinking of the soft parts between the bones and to the stoop gradually acquired by old peo vle.—London: Leader. Freight From Pittsburg. Pittsburg originates the largest freight tonnage of any city in the world; more than New York, Chicago and Philadelphia combined. . Invested in Corea. Americans have between $10,000,000 and $20,000,000 invested in Corea. Five millions are in very rich gold mines. The Cylinder Books ot Babyion. In addition to the flat tablet, the Babylonians and Assyrians Wwrote some of their books on large prisms and cylinders. Some of these cylin ders are as much as two fect in length and eight to ten inches in diam eter. Being made of the same mate rial as the tablats, they are necessas rily heavy and cumbersome, yet they were in some. ways more convenient for reading, since they were perfor ated longitudinally, and placed on a spindle, so as to revolve. In some cases the writing runs.from end to end of the cylinder, which is then suspended horizeonially. In cther cases the cylinder is upright, the columns running from top to bottom. In the latter case the books is usually mot a trué cylinder, but a prism of six, eight, or ten sides, each side inscrib ed with a separate column of writing like the page of a book. These prisms and eylinders were commonly selected by the kings to contain records of their deeds. Thus the British Museum contains prisms on which are record ed achievements of such famous con querors as Sargon, Sennacherib, and the Elamite warrior Cyrus. The last named cylinder has peculiar interest Lecause it describes the taking of Babylon.—Henry Smith Williams, in Harper’s Magazine. © Just-Life in Labrador. At Indian Harbor I went aboard the schooner Jolly Crew. It was a raw, foggy day, with a fresh northeast gale blowing, and a high sea running out side the harbor. They were splitting fish on the deck; the skiff was just in from the trap—she was still wet with spray. “I sails with me sons an’ gran’sons, zur, ’said the skippar, smiling. “Sure, I be a old feller t’ be down the Lab rador, ispt 1, zur?’ He did not mean that. He was proud of his age and strength—glad that he was still able “t’ be at the fishin’.” “’Tis a wonder you've lived through it all” I said; He laughed. “An’ why, zur?”’ he asked. “Many’s the ship wrecked on this coast,” I answersad. “Oh, no, zur,” said he; “not’ 8e many, zur, as you might think. Down’ this way, zur, we knows how' t’ sail!” That was a succinct expianation’ of very much that had puzzled me. “Ah, well,” said I, “’tis a hard life.” “Hard?” he asked, doubtfully. “Yes,” I answered; “’tis a hard life —the fishin’.” “Oh, no, zur,” said he, quietly, look ing up from his werk. “ Tis just-t just life!”—Norman Duncan, in Har per’s Magazine, . Dangers of White Lead. The French Government is at pres ent considering the question of the use of white lead and other lead mix tures for painting houses. A commit tee of the Chamber of Deputies has been appointed to investigate the mat ter, and Mr. Breton, one of the ex perts, has been authorized to publish the results of his investigation in pamphlet form. He condemns the ad cition of white lead to paints and all colors containing it, declaring them to be poisonous in a large degree, both for the workmen and for the inhabi tants of a house painted with lead colors.—Report of Consul General Public Schools in Russia. In Social Service are given some late statistics regarding public schools in Russia. There are 84,544 public schools in the Empire, of which num ber 40,131 are under the jurisdiction of the Minister of Public Education, 42,588 under the jurisdiction of the Holy Synod, and the remainder under other departments. Of the pupils, 73,167 are adults, 3,291,694 boys and 1,203,902 girls. The teachers number 172,000. The maintenance of these schools costs more than $25,000,900. The average school tax for ecity schools is $9.50, and for village schools $5 per pupil.