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Bagy
.
“Take care of the pennies and the
pounds will take caro of themselves.”
Largo things are but an aggrega
tion of small things. If wo take care
of the small things we are in effect
taking care of the large things which
the small things combine to make.
Take care of what you eat, when
you eat and how you eat, and your
stomach will take care of itself. But
who takes oare of Buck trivial things?
That is why, some day, the majority
of people have to take care of the
stomaoh. When that day comes,
thero is no aid so effective in undo
ing the results of past oarelessness as
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery. It strengthens the stomach and
restores the organs of digestion and
nutrition to a condition of healthy
aotivity. It cures biliousness, heart
burn, flatulence, indigestion, palpita
tion, dizziness, cold extremities and
a score of other ailments which are
but the sympuoms of disorder in the
stomaoh and its allied organs.
I have had occasion to, use your
Black’Draujht Stock and Poultry Medi.
clnc and am pleased to say that I never
used anything!or stock that gave half as
good satisfaction. I heartily recom.
mend it to all owners of stock.
J. B. BELSHER, St. Louis, Mo.
Sick stock or poultry should not
eat ohoap stock food any more than
sick persons Bhould oxpect to be
oared by food. When your stock
and poultry are Bick give them med-
ioine. Don’t stuff them with worth
less stock foods. Unload the bowels
and stir up the torpid liver and the
animal will be cured, if it bo possi
ble to cure it. Block-Draught Stock
and Poultry Modioino unloads the
bowols and stirs up tho torpid liver.
It cures every malady of stock if
taken in time. Secure a 25-cent can
of Block-Draught Stook and Poultry
Medicine and it will pay for itself ten
times over. Horses work bettor. Cows
givo more milk. Hogs gain flesh.
And hens lay more eggs. It solves the
problem of making as much blood,
flesh and energy as possible out of
the Bmollost amount of food con?
sumod. Buy a can from your dealer;
Rheumatism
and all Liver, Kidney and Blad
der troubles caused by uric acid
in the system. It cures by
cleansing and vitalizing the
blood, thus removing the cause
of disease. It gives vigor and
tone and builds up the health
and strength of the patient
while using the remedy.
URICSOL. is a luminary in
the medical world. It has cured
and will continue to core more
of the above diseases than all
other known remedies, many of
which do more harm than good.
This great and thoroughly tested
and endorsed California Remedy
never disappoints. It cures in
fallibly if taken as directed.
Try it and bs convinced that
it is a ponder and a blessing to
Bufferincr humanity.
Price fl.OOper bottle, or6 bot
tles for $5. For sale by druggists.
8end stamp for book of partic
ulars and wonderful cures. If
your druggist cannot supply yon
it will be sent, prepaid, upon
receipt of price. Address: '
URICSOL CBBMICAL CO., Loa Angtlei, Cal.
ortha
LAMAR * UNION DRUaw^Atlaala, Oa.
Would You Live Your Life Over?
The query in the headline is prob
ably as old as adult mankind. No
doubt Adam asked hiniself the same
question, and his descendants have
been repeating it to themselves ever
since. Nevertheless, it is one of
those questions that are ever new,
no matter how old they may be; and
each individual must answer it for
himself or herself. There is proba
bly not a person who, if he or she
were permitted to turn baok the
hands of time, retaining for guid
ance the knowledge and experience
of past life, but would choose to live
his or her life .over. In every life
there are hundreds, even thousands,
of details that one would wish to
manage differently. There are er
rors that would be avoided, weak
nesses that would be conquered,
temptations that would be resisted
and cast aside. Many things that
were done would be left undone,
and many others that were undone
would receive prompt and careful
attention. It is so easy to see mis
takes after they have been made,
and so hard to see them before they
are made.
The wish to live one’s life over
again in order that it might be
made better may be calfed a natural
one. The mind of mankind natur
ally desires the best, and has an
ideal to which it would reach.
There is no individual who, if per
mitted to make a fresh start with a
full knowledge of the pitfalls, but
would avoid them and thus pass in
to a seoond existence of virtue and
wealth. But all that is beside the
question, which is, Would you live
your life over again? That meanB,
would you be willing to go over
again precisely the same ground
without a single detail being chang
ed? Would you care to undergo the
same old struggles, trials, privations,
sufferings, disappointments in order
to enjoy what of happiness life has
held for you? There are a great
many persons who would unhesitat
ingly answer "no” to that proposi
tion.
Fortunately, human nature is so
constituted that mankind lives in
the present and the future. There
are few who "live in the past.” If
this were not true, the life of the av
erage person would he burdened
with sorrows too heavy to be borne,
and it would be a sad, sad world.
But the passing of time brings fpr-
getfulness and the promises of the
future beget hope and cheerfulness.
That which is behind cannot be
helped, but we can all hope for bet
ter things in the future. / Each nor
mal person, theretore, will probably
say, "If I were to live my life over
again precisely as before, what
would it profit me more than the
life I am now living? I should suf
fer muoh for a little pleasure. Jt
were better to look to more happii-
ness in the future.” A philosophical
view was taken of the matter by an
Australian poet of the name of Gor
don, who wrote:
"I’ve had my share of troubles and I’ve
done my share of toil,
And life is short—the longest life a span;
I oare not now to tarry for the corn or
for the oil,
Or for the wine that muketh glad the
heart of man;
For gifts misspent and good undone and
resolutions vain
’xis somewhat late to trouble—this I
know:
I should live the same life over if I had
to live again
And the ohanoes are I go where most
men go.”
They are still quotipg him against
his own policy.. Sotrie cruelly un
kind person has .fished the following
out of an article signed "Theodore
Roosevelt” in a back number of the
Se wanes Review: "The whole civil
ization of the future owes a debt of
gratitude greater than can be ex
pressed in words to that Democratic
policy which has kepi the temperate
zones of the new and the newest
worlds a heritage for the white peo
pie.”
—: *-•-«? ;—
A Great Sensation.
Thorp was a big sensation in
Leesville, Iud., when W. H. Brown
of that place, who was expected to
die,had his life saved by Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption.
He writes: 44 I endured insufferable
agonies from Asthma, but your
New Discovery gave me immediate
relief and soon thereafter effected
a complete cure.” Similar cures
of consumption, pneumonia, bron
chitis and grip are numerous. It’s
the peerless, remedy for all throat
and lung troubles. Price 50o and
$1. Guaranteed. Trial bottles free
at Holtzclaw’s Drugstore.
Rebuilding The Forests.
The Kirby Lumber Company of
Texas is perhaps the largest lumber
company in the world, cutting tim
ber at a rapid rate every year. It
owns 1,210,000 acres, and on these
acres it is growing a second crop of
timber. It has timber enough to
last thirty years, and at the end of
that time its second crop will be
ready for the axman. This second
crop will be the result of much care
and forethought, says the Knoxville
Tribune. No trees are cut that
"clear less than a foot,” and from
two to five cone trees are left to ev
ery acre. In this way seed is scat
tered in all directions and artificial
planting becomes unnecessary. A
fire patrol is maintained, men being
stationed through the company’s
forests, but after the trees are four
years old this will not be necessary,
because fire cannot then injure the
trunks of the trees.
This plan will prolong .the forests
of the Kirby Company indefinitely,
for when the young trees of to-day
are out thirty yearn from now a like
process of reproduction will be fol
lowed, and the Kirby Company will
thus always have' plenty of timber
to cub and sell, althought its eight
een mills cut each 40,000,000 feet of
pine.—Exchange.
No Cotton.
The Albany Herald tells of one
farmer in Dougherty county who
will plant no cotton this year—J. L.
Bunch, who is to try the , no-cotton
system on 176 acres of laud. Says
the Herald: "He will put 86 acres
in cantaloupes, 60 acres in corn and
26 or 30 acres in sweet potatoes,
with perhaps 2 acres devoted to sor
ghum for the hogs. Mr. Bunch pro
poses to raise his own meat. He
figures that at the lowest calcula
tion he will gather 126 bushels of
yams to tbe acre. At that rate his
30 acres will produce 3,760 bushels.
At an average of 60 cents a bushel
—and a’lower price will hardly be
received—that will mean $1,875.
No 30 aores of farm land in Georgia
will yield $1,876 worth of cotton.
As for the corn, Mr. Bunch’s 60
acres will give him as muoh as his
stock will eat and leave him p barn
full to sell besides. Mr. Bunch be
lieves he is going to clear more mon
ey from his farming operations this
year than he has ever succeeded in
clearing in the past, and we are in
elined to agree with him.”
Read the Bible Ninety Times.
I also raaice and- sell CtW&QU®
and the best Water Ground Meal.
CT. lEEOTXSIEIR,.
Bought
and Sold
Mrs. O. M. Fitzgerald, of ^Newark,
N. J., mother of Bishop James N.
Fitzgerald of St. Louis, has just fin
ished reading the Bible for the 90th
time and wants to make the number
one hundred before she dies.
She has studed the Holy Book so
carefully that she oan now recite
word by word every line of mapy
chapters in the Old and New Testa
ments from memory, and her repeat
ed reading only Berves to strengthen
her mental powers in this direction
So far as known there is no minister
of the gospel or student of the Holy
Writ in this country who can boast
of suoh a record.—Exchange.
:
A Demonstration of W h£t Chamber
Iain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy Can Do;
‘‘One of our customers, a high
ly respected citizen of this place,
had been for ten years a sufferer
from chronic diarrhoea,” write
Walden & Martin, druggists, of
Enterprise, Ala. ‘‘He had used
various patent preparations and
been treated by physicians, with
out any permanent benefit. A few
months ago he commenced taking
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy and in a short
time was entirely cured. Many
citizens of Enterprise who know
the gentleman will testify to the
truthfulness of this statement.”
For sale by all druggists.
There is no country in the world
that can equal the United States in
variety of weather. During the last
few days of March there was in Io
wa a hot wave that was a record-
breaker for that month. At the
same there were snow storms in
Missouri, Pennsylvania and Ohio.
And while it was roasting hot in
Iowa and freezing cold in Missouri
and Pennsylvania, delightful spring
weather pervaded the South.
= • n r
The best phyBio: Chamberlain’s
Stomach and Liver Tablets. Easy
to take; pleasant in effect. For
sale by all druggists.
1YA «*■»»»
ump
I am prepared to furnish in any quantity
desired best quality
ROUGH AND1DRESSED LUMBER
OAR LOAD LOTS A SPECIALTY.
SCHOOLBOOKS
Special Olfear
to out of town customers
on our Circulating Library
Picture Frames made to order
in best manner at lowest prices.
McEvoy Book & Stationery Co.,
572 Cherry Street, MACON, GA
NAPIER BROS.
CELEBRATED
Black Rock Acid
AND FAMOUS
“Samson Guano”
Have been thoroughly tested
for many years on all varie
ties of soils in Middle Georgia, and from’ ACTUAL
FIELD TESTS in competition with other brands have
taken the “BLUE RIBBON” over nil competitors.
The BEST is always the CHEAPEST.
ApdreSs, ICsTAPIER BROS.,
MACON, GEORGIA.
FOR
Biliousness
The liver must be gently stirred so
that the bile will be thrown off in the right
channel; the system must be invigorated '«
[ and Tonic Pellets form the Mild Power Cure.
L that completely does the work without shock Ji
t or injury to any part of the system.^
^ COMPLETE TREATMENT
v 25 doses 25 cents
^ at all dealers.
H. C. BAKKCb
% Agt.
-DEALER IN-
9 viuvuuj uuiauij) uuuuj
Tinware,- W oodenware,
Farming Implements, Etc.
308 Third St. (Near Post Office) MACON, GA
NEAT WORK.
REASONABLE PRICES.
GIVE US d IRIAL ORDER
A ' ' A ; ■' ''