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THE GEORGIA CRACKER, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1902.
BUTTER AS A MEDICINE
It Is -Good For Consumptives ana
.For TiiIn, Weak People.
Butter is fo common a commodity
that people use it and scarcely ever
think what wonderful value, lies at
their hand in the pats of dainty yellow
cream fat. Of course they know that it
is, useful in many branches. of \cookery
and that without its aid the table
would be bare of its thinly rolled bread
and butter, its delicate cakeldts and its
other usual accessories. Beybnd these
uses the value of'trotter* is a thing only
vaguely thought of.
But this' delicate fat is as valuable
as the dearer cod liver oil for weakly,
thin people, and doctors have, frequent-
ly recommended the eating of many
thin slices of bread thickly spread with
butter as a means of pleasantly taking
Into the bodily tissues one of the pur
est forms of fat it is possible to get
Butter is a carbon, and all excess of
it is stored up as fat in the body. It
gives energy and power to work to
those who eat heartily of it. So it is
not economy at table to spare the but
ter, even to the healthy folk. For any
one afflicted with consumption butter
cookery, if plenty of fat can be digest
ed, is one qf the best ways of curing
the disease if it Js in its early stages
or of keeping it at bay if advanced.
Butter is not a simple fat, composed
of merely one sort. It is a mixture of
no less than seven different sorts of
fats, and no more complex oil can be
taken than this is.
Sallow,
Bilious People
I a gentle stimulant for the liver
tonic for the system. This essential^^
combination is found in W
r d aMON’s liver pills!
Jt^*ANDTONIC PELLETS
They do the work completely and thoroughly, and
make strong men and women of invalids; they
assist Nature to a healthy normal condition, and i
k banish disease in a natural, easy way. 25c a i
^ box from all dealers. Write for Free
^ Samples. JM
BROWN MFQ. CO. MA
NEW YORK
AND OREENEV1LLE,
SL TENN. " 1Wy
removes from the soil
large quantities of
The fertilizer ap
plied, must furnish
enough Potash, or the
land will lose its pro
ducing power.
Read carefully our books ,
on crops—sent /ret.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
King’s Mt.
Gastonia..
Charlotte.,
A PAN AND A LEOPARD,
An Astonished Woman and a Still
More Astonished Animal.
Kula is a district in the Himalayas
consisting of a chain of the most lovely
valleys conceivable, with this draw
back, among others, that each hill path
that runs by the inhabitants* huts more
often than not contains a lurking leop
ard. One day a worthy Kula house
wife came out from her cooking and,
Standing on the edge of rock, emptied
a pan of boiling water into the rank
herbage growing below. It fell splash
on the back of a sleeping leopard, who
jumped perpendicularly into the air as
high as the roof of the hut.
What might have happened next who
can say? But the astonished woman
dropped the pan with a clang on the
rock, and the leopard took one leap
down hill. The pan followed, and the
leopard’s downward leaps became lon
ger and swifter as the pan bounded aft
er it from rock to rock. When last
seen, that leopard had just achieved a
leap of about 350 feet to the very bot
tom of the ravine, thousands of feet
below, and the pan whirled about 500
feet over it on to the opposite side.
The leopard would have eaten the old
woman with pleasure, but a pan, the
contents of which first scalded half the
hide off him and then bounded, clang
ing in his wake, from the top of the ,
Himalayas to the plains below was
something he could not face.
INTERESTING
FstMa
No. 35.
Daily.
ANNO UNCEMENT
How a Diamond Cats Glass.
It has been ascertained by a series oi!
experiments that a diamond does no';
cut out the glass, file fashion, but
forces the particles apart, so that a
continuous crack is formed along the
line' of the intended cut. The crack
once begun, very small force is neces
sary to carry it .through the glass, and
thus the piece is easily broken off. The
superficial crack or cut- need not be
deep. A depth, according to fine meas
urements, of a two-hundredth part of
one inch is quite sufficient to accom
plish the purpose, so that the applica
tion of much force In using the dia
mond only wears out the gem without
doing the work any better.
Numerous stones, such as quartz and
minerals, when ground into
In Pound, hak pound boxes and in any quantity open
The peer of any candy sold in Atlanta.
other
proper form, will cut glass like a dia
mond, but are not so valuable for that
purpose, lacking the requisite hardness
and soon losing the sharp edge neces
sary to make the operation a success.
A Clever Jap.
A marvelous feat is recorded of a
young Japanese student. He enteric
the University ofit Berlin some years
ago as a medical student, being then
entirely ignorant of German as well as
of science, yet in three months he pass
ed an examination conducted in Ger
man, including several branches ofrthe
medical curriculum.
STATIONS. No. 11
Daily.
Lv...Lula...At 215p
“ MaysviHe “ l45p
“ Harmony “ 128p
HEINZ’ CELEBRATED PICKLES
Note close connection made at Lola
Barrows, was ingenious in detaining
his congregation. On one occasion, aft
er preaching nearly two hours—as long'-
-as he could feel secure in the presence
of all his hearers—he remarked that
he was done preaching to sinners and
that they were at liberty to go. The
rest of his discourse would be address
ed to good people.
A gentleman who once went to hear
him stated that when the hourglass
was nearly ready to be turned a sec
ond time from the comnfencement of
his sermon he said, much to the relief
-of the person Who related it, “Once
more.” After going on some eight or
ten minutes longer he said, “To con
clude,” and after another about equal
m&m line trains.
«A” a. m. “P” p. m. “M”noon.
Chesapeake Line Steamers in daily serria
between Norfolk and Baltimore. .
Nos. 37 and S8—“ Washington andScntfof»
«m Limited.” Solid Pulman train, teagc®
posed exclusively of finest Pullman wnnim>
Of latest design, through between hew ms
e d Atlanta. Through Pullman sleepmj «
tween New Y-ork and JSew Orleans, va
The St. Lawrence.
Vessels of 4,000 tons can ascend the
St. Lawrence river to Montreal, a dis
tance of a thousand miles from the
sea. Only one other river 4n the world,
the Amazon, is navigable to such a dis
tance for craft as large.
Stop at Gainesvill .Lula, Tocwa-Sene^
KSBSS58B0S
lotto, connecting at
same numbers for and from waanmg^^
York and the east, carrying
taaagaaaSrjSfe
Greensboro with deep®***
Pullman cars on this
and Charlotte. Ample Arst an
coach accommodations for local ana ,
^NcklSS and SS—“ United
solid between Washington
via Southern Bmiway, 4* ® J 0 f coacs^
L. & N. R. R.. being ^P^Seagersd *
through Without chanj^ for c?.rJ
classes. PuUnma dra^»K?^S^£
between New York an d IS ^ i^enreen
’WSSSSugig
S. H. HARDWICK. n p* I k: m^“
Mark Twain’s
Grandma’s Cure For Dandruff.
“We often scoff at the ancient grand
mother remedies,” said a physician the
bother day in conversation with a pa
tient, “but our forefathers used to get
a power of comfort from them.never
theless, and cheaply too. Science has
progressed wonderfully, of course, and
we are much better off on the whoie
now than.were our sires, but we forget
a great many of the little things. Now,
I notice that you are troubled with
dandruff, and I’ll wager that you have
spent many dollars on different alleged
cures, and you are worse off now'th&n
when you commenced. Let me give
you a ‘grandmother* prescription that
never fails. * Go to a drug store and
buy 5 cents’ worth of salts of tartar.
Dissolve half of it in warm water and
wash the head thoroughly. Repeat
this at intervals of three months for a
year, and you won’t be annoyed with
dandruff any more.”
G. C. Clemens, of Topeka,
Kan., the no-
t e d constitu-
tional lawyer,
who bears so
striking a re-
semblance to
Mark Twain,
(Samuel B.
Clemens) that 'Wff
he is frequent- UBlJOBbI
ly taken for the
original Mark* ?• c * Clemons,
is a man cof deep intellect and
wide experience. He is con
sidered one of the foremost
lawyers in this country. In a re
cent letter to the Dr. Miles
Medical Co., Mr. Clemens says:
* * “Personal experience and obser
vation have thorough./ satisfied me that
Dr. Miles’ Nervine contains true merit;
and is excellent for what it is recom
mended.”
Mr. Norman Waltrip, Sup. Pres. Bank
ers’ Fraternal Society, Chicago, says:
Mu.*.’ Pain Pills
are invaluable for headache and all
g ain. I had been a great sufferer from
eadache until I learned of the efficacy
of Dr. Miles’ Pain Pills. Now I always
carry them and prevent recurring at
tacks by taking a pill when the symp
toms first appear.”
Sold by all Druggists.
Price, 25c. per Box.
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.
BLACKSMITH TOOLS,
CUTAWAY HARROWS,
STEEL BEAM TURNERS,
TIGER DISC PLOWS,
SINGLE PLOW STOCKS & PLOWS.
TERRELL CULTIVATORS, LITTLE JOE and ROMAN HARROWS,
HARNESS. SADDLES, COLLARS & BRIDLES,
WHEELBARROWS, SHOVELS, HOES, ETC.
BELTING, MILL SUPPLIES,
• ^
HEAVY & SHELF HARDWARE, ALL KINDS,
ire You Can Get EXACTLY SUITED. . Our Prices Will TICKLE YOU.
The Test of Greatness.
When Blliston went from London to
bis own theater at Birmingham, he
was known to scarcely a member of
his own company. On reprimanding
one of them sharply the irate actor
threatened to kick him off the stage.
He rushed to the stage manager and
asked who that man was.
“Mr. A-—ff* said the manager.
“A grea* man, a very great man,”
said Ellision. “He threatened to kick
me, the lessee of Drury Lane. Such a
man as that must go to London. He
mustn’t waste his energies here.” Amd
he engaged the actor on the spot for
Drury Lane.
* DESl GHS>
Jftssssg
Patents ^8ken tbroc| argef m ^3
“SiSA* WWtft.
weetlf { fg!£*£
A handsomely jmtfnag t
ealation of Ynfi
iUNN S
Branch Office- &> e
DINKINS OLD STAND