Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, May 07, 1908, Image 6

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The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action, In supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of Iligs and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remark able success. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle, he Government of Spain has just staried in to foster its agricultural industry by sending touring lecturers over tae country, NEWWAYwemicime 10 STOCK MEDI(A [V ol A tow wosks ago I gave ons of your Medicatad Salt Brick to an old mule who had lost his appe ilu, beosome very thin and lfeless. After using notised a docided improvement in his condi z‘lfln, and now after giving him the second one o onn kick ap his heels with the colts and *join im their plays.” M. 8. HERRAN (J. P. Hale Co.) ~ Nawborne, Ala., Fab, 22, 1808, Letters changed every insertion. Sold Everywhere by Dealers in Feed, Groceries, Drugs and Hardware AT 20 TO 25 CENTS PER BRICK. If your dealer will not supply you, write us BLACKMAN STOCK REMEDY CO,, Chattanooga, Tennesses, e~ MOTHER GRAY'S % SWEET POWDERS . FOR CHILDREN, (A‘ (‘artfiin o'uro for Ffivnllnbnr-. BN ~3'¢:'.;.sE ""l"’l‘i’llhh'lr I&“c:-‘t‘;sln."' (:'I-ordt-l"l. and Destroy Mother Gray, Wormws, They ‘!rrnh up Colde ‘Nurse in Child- in 34 hours. At all Druggists, 25 ots. ren’s Home, Sample mailed FREE demu Now York City. A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N. Y. BABY'S Favourite |@[lCllra '[.5.23:‘?55 = b | /fjfll K S“AP ) - IM WS.C»\W Bl ,10[L§ ‘ U . ' e\-\ ’ \\;\ —— @&;" Warm baths with Cuticura Soap followed, when neces sary, by gentle anointings with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, hair and hands of infants and children, relieve ecze mas, rashes, itchings, irrita tions and chafings, permit rest and sleep and point to a speedy removal of torturing, disfiguring humours when all else fails. - Sold throughout the world. Depots: London, 27, Charterhiouse Sq.; Paris, & Rue de la Paix; Austra- ML‘ R. Towns & Co,, Sydney; India, B. K. Paul, Caloutta; China, Hong Konk Drug Co.: Japan, Maruya, Ltd, Tokio: Russis, Ferrein, _N«ysuv; P T Ry RYN Br-Post Free, Cutioura Booklet on the Skin. SULPHOZONE CATARRH BALM, The Great Antiseptic Catarrh Remedy. 2 Telatty sewegtic for the mambranen "i':,,"‘{‘.“";;;‘ M.-lvl vm:;fl;\z' comp u:\lmn- arising to gontiinis, Beallng ant ofactive in 1 Rsu rlgned warantee Bond o refund the price, & Tt ko S il Rl The Hightower Drug Conr - Daltoa e . HEARACHE FROM EYESTRAIN. ’Blight Defects of Vision Often Causa | of Much Suffering. ~ DBasing himself en his records of nearly 1,300 eye examinations, Dr. 8. W. 8. Toms claims that 90 per cent, of al] those suffering from reflex or neuralgic headache have oc ular defects, . Over 600 of the patients examined were altogether unaware of their de fect, Fully half the cases were of only slight refractive errors or muscu lar fmbalan(-e. and it ig in these cas es in which ciliary spasm is the di rect factor in causing headache in persons whose occupation «calls for near vision that accommodative as thenopia results, There is no apparent relation be twaen the severity of the headache and the degree of the ocular defect, and nothing especially characteristic, excep! perhaps the patient’s non-sus picion of the cause. Sickness or health impairment may be the first ineiting factor in some patient with considerable ocular defects which gave no trouble before.—From the Family Doctor, Hicks' Capudine Cures Women's Montnly Pains, Backache, Nervousness, and Headache, llt's Liquid. Effects imme diately. Prescribed by physicians with best results. 10c., 25¢., and 50¢., at drug stores, i Even a single taste of defeat is hard to swallow, . S ot it IR e | 28c. WILL CURE YOUR CORNS - If you invest it in a bottle of ABBOTT'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT, It removes hard or soft ‘ corns, bunions or sore, eallous Bpots on the feet, warta or indurations of the skin. No - paln, no cutting, no “eating” of the flesh, no after soreness; quick, safe, sure. At druggig* or by mall from Txe Asßsorr Co., Savannah, Zia. e e o e AT THE CONCERT. - Mr. Jinks, we want you to declla & bet* “Happy to oblige, I'm sure.” “Was that last selectlon something classical, or was it the orchestra tun ing up?’—Washington Herald. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hal'’s Catarrh Cure. F.J. CuENEY & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 yvears, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obhiatlons made b{v his firm. Warpixg, Kixvan & M ARVIN, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. _ HalVsCatarrh Cure istaken internally, act ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free, Price, 75¢. {)er bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, A i matond s ] Suspected of Early Frivolity. | A young Harvard man, through fam ily influence, obtained a position as lconfld«emtlal clerk in the office of a well-known railroad president, The | first morning he got down to the of ] fice at 9 o'clock. He found the presi | dent hard at work, : _ J On the second morning he present {ed himself at 8.30 o'clock, Again he | found his chlef there ahead of him, ! working diligently. The third day he | managed to make the office at 8 | o'clock. There was the president, al- I ready buried in business. E That night on his way home the young man took counsel with him self and determined to be ahead of his bess at any cost, Accordingly he set his alarm clock for 6.30, and by great exercise of will power managed l'm show up at the office before 7.30 i o'clock. But there was his chiet | working away as if he had not left | his desk at all. ‘ Ag the clerk entered the president ! looked up at him with a quizzical air. | “Young man,” saiq he, “what use do you make of your forenoons?’—Phila delphia Ledger, . i WHICH? . The young author was in a quan: 1 dary. “Would you,” inquired e, “have your hero tear down the street or tear up the street?" ! “That depends. Is your hero a . sprinter or a paving contractor?’— - Courier-Journal, | e s | | FRIENDS HELP ! St. Paul Park Incident. .~ “After drinking coffee for break fast 1 always felt languid and dull, having no ambition to get to my - morning duties. Then in about an hour or so a weak, nervous derange . ment of the heart and stomach would | come over me with such force I would frequently have to lie down. ! “At other times ! had severe head aches; stomach finally became affect ed and digestion so impaired that 1 had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipation. A lady, for many years State President of the W. C. T. U., told me she had been greatly bene fited by quitting coffee and using Pos tum Food Coffee; she was troubled for years with asthma. She said it Was no cross to quit coffee when she found she could have as delicious an article as Postum. | “Another lady, who had been trou bled with chronic dyspepsia for years, - found immediate relief on ceasing coffee and beginning Postum twice a day. She was wholly cured. Still another friend told me that Postum Food Coffee was a godsend to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum. | “So many such cases came to my - notice that I concluded coffee was the cause of my trouble and | quit and - took up Postum. | am more than pleased to say that my days of trou ble have disappeared. lam well and happy.” "“There's a Reason.” Read *“The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. | Ever read the above letter? A new - one appears from time to time. They ~are genuine, true and full of human ~interest. . .',l«, £ sy ':t: o * s ey G Fo H 2 = W E(“"f;;';w R E-' “Y, W 1 m,"‘ A QIP LA G s >AR i STR AN ;f,.,', s . A e’ “ a,.“:v",‘y.t riioß B B b Tk TR T AN D foh:” o «E’,f«."!v,(’,';" A 47 L i B A T Q QT "?"’ 2 ";“4' &;&;fi‘ e YF\ 7 % qu{l %Y Vi I ' e L . 4 .’-‘., , S Y off Pvz oand el o o ; L Remember the Cows, After you have been in the house a long time, shut up away from the fresh air, you feel the echilling winds. Same way with the cows. Keep them in as far as you can on these raw days, Ripening Cream., 1f you have a small amount of cream, do not skim so closely and add some milk. Put in a little start er and warm it by putting the cream can in warm water, constantly stir ring until the proper temperature is obtained, when it will quickly ripen. A Wond-Lot Don’'t, Don’t allow the stock in the vood ot for they will be sure to trample down or crush a great many seed lings that have the makings of a good tree in them. They not only trample them down but, if they are hungry, they will hrowse upon them as well.—New York Witness, Solder the Pails. Milk pails with rags drawn in through holes in the hottom are a miserable nuisance. You can get a little kit of soldering tools very cheap, and it is not much of a trick to learn how to use it. Scrape away the metal around the hole, drop a bit of resin over the place, or a little sulphuric acid, and then go ahead with your solder, Make a nice, smooth job of it. | e c— Care of Dairy Utensils. Let all pails, pans and receptacles for milk and cream be rinsed with cold water as soon as the contents are removed, says the Tlarmers’ Guide. This prevents ail gummy ac cumulation, especially if they must be set aside for a time to await wash ing. Then wash in lukewarm water, using a brush for seams and the wire strainer. Finish with scalding water, rinsing thoroughly. If the churn used is of the barrel variety, give a few revolutions, filled with the hot water. Do not neglect to bhe very careful in cleansing the separator if oae is used. Because the milk ‘“‘only passes through it,” is no reason why it should be set aside with a *‘lick and a promise.”’—Rural Life. : 2 THE CORRECT COMPOUNDING OF FERTILIZERS. vaerbojbharc Lime 'flwma Phosbhate: x\\ ‘k ; / y Phosphate; | sV <' A : - J sute i I\/ N\ NTR farm M i, y ™ ' 7ano Guano h N LT Cotagh Salph A\“‘V.i Kainit Nitrate of Soda We have seen many loads of stable manure on the way to the orchard sprinkled with lime, and alsoc many a compost rich in manure covered with quicklime. One often hears of other combinations of material intended to be of the highest quality as a fertilizer, which separate or alone would be, but together are of little value. The following brief article and dia gram are taken from a recent gopy of the Agricultural Gazette, of New South Wales: When purchasing a manure always insist on a guarantee of its com position as determined by analysis. Artificial manures should be mixed with about three times their weight of dry loam, and distributed evenly. Never add lime to a manure containing sulphate of ammonia, or hlood and bone manures, as in these cases loss of nitrogen results: and when lime has been applied to the land do not use such manures until about three weeks afterward. The accompanying fertilizer diagram, which represents in a graphic manner the points to be taken into consideration in the mixing of differ ent manures, is reproduced in the hope that it will be found useful to farmers who make up their own mixtures. The diagram originates with Dr. Geekens, Alzey, Germany, and is taken from an article by Mr. Leo Buring, in the Garden and Field of October, 1903. Substances connected by thick line must not be mixed together. Substances connected by double line must only be mixed immediately before use. Substances con nected by single thin line may be mixed together at any time.—G. G. A in The Country Gentleman. Guinea Fowls, | In many localities the guinea hen fs considered as a kind of a novelty or nuisance about the place. It does not seem to be thoroughly well un derstood that the eggs of the guinea hen are highly valued by bakers for cake baking, and that the young guinea fowl will bring the highest price of any broiler upon the market. If more attention were given to the selection of the breeding stock, pre venting too close inbreeding and pro viding a separate house away from the chickens for the guinea fowls, their cultivation might become more general and profitable. Guinea hens may be taught to live and rear their young almost the same as chick en hens. The trouble experienced from keeping guinea fowls in buiid ings or poultry houses is the over powering infiuence of mites and lice upon them., They are much more easily destroyed by lice and mites than the chickens. The yvoung of the guinea hen scarcely exist at all when once attacked by lice or mites, which ouickly destroy them. _ Guinea hens live out in the open. build their nests under an old stwap. When once they locate their nest and lay a few ezgs therein, they continu ally remain ahbout this locality, and it is not difficult for this reason to locate their nests and take from them part of the eggs. These eggs may be placed under chicken hens or the guinea hens themselves. When either of these are permitted to hatch the yecung guineas, it is well to con fine the mother and young as the young are hatched and keep thern. near at hand where they can be looked after and properly fed and cared for for a short time until the - young guineas become of a size that enables them to follow the mother ‘about and withstand the strain of traveling so far in a day. i In some localities the merchants will not purchase guinea eggs, but if those who have them for sale would carry them to the bakeshops, the bakers, as soon as they know of their value, are very glad to secure them, for they can be used to a bet ter advantage in cake-baking than any other, excepting duck eggs. Duck egegs are the most valued in the bake shop, guinea eggs being a close sec ond. Guinea hens, like turkeys, are of a roving nature; guinea chicks, like the young poults, are easily destroyed by dampness and inbreeding. — The Feather. Rural Life Suggestions. ; Even if things go wrong, ‘‘cheer up.” Farm folks can have the parcels post if they demand it. The King system of road making is too inexpensive to become popular. ' If you have a good idea, plan or suggestion, pass it on, No man has ever discovered a method of running a farm success fully without work. A man is not necessarily a fagrmer because he was ‘“born at the plow handles.” ‘What is the condition of the school house where your children spend their school hours? . A well balanced mixture of brain, muscle and common sense is what makes the good farmer. Many a farmer boy is taking les sons in physical culture, this winter, at the end of a crosscut saw. Don't be discouraged if you can not make your farming experiences measure up to the institute lecturs er's ‘dreams.” The most unfortunate man on earth is the farmer who fails in every thing he undertakes, vet holds persistently to the belief that his own methods are best, The careless, indifferent farmer whose products are marketed in a filthy, unattractive condition is in a hopeless minority, and ought to come over on the side of decency, or quit the farm. The Cornell station, after axperi menting for several years, found that potatoes dug the last week of Sep tember or the first two of October will keep much better than those dug when the vines die. The only ob jection to this method is the possi bility of the insects and grubs in the ground destroying the tubers if they are left in the ground too long — Rural Life. e e et St e ettt The wireless telegraph station which has been erected for the Rus slan Admiralty between Sevastopol and Odessa has underzone a satisfae tory trial, 3 £ 4 é {; ; A 4 ¢ &;& < ¥ oz ¥ = & ; Z s ¥ : = : iy = { L - 3 S ::j,’. }l—% P g + S + s %’ Bk B , ; % *® ¥ "'s4' iST A 53 R T oo ’ T STI : 4 b o . s R oeLy TT T Wl ¢ SSceme L 4 el Rl - o> - % 22 ’ ; : : e .’;«-,,,.n AN | ; G eTN Ermamn D e A o HEmaTamei PR P s "‘,z?\-‘ % e v g \?/’ TR A ‘;fii\ Thii 530 AR 2% efi( R Ab Al 41,# 8N s Y A N 0% 3 ME RR e e aoke sBl~ FRy TENEN Y ! A ;fm s e e C RS Pail 1 g il e - ‘-’,’;:‘ eey PR 3 Sowl aNidEg A -,,;i B %‘«%*.‘(\ Gosiiave. By i .g’i., g& 1 s L b 2 Tl D Lo -3 bt eBl ‘ eTR e miiiy Lo bl . bLo"? 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FE g s?# Rt R 3 B Sl SR R R Rl < EaiN e i B DR FTEuR RRO AR g o 2 ',%%e“‘,’ . é‘ 8 \:3\35 G, P I '(" ‘gé‘i rfl“ s el R a 3 ERGE B e b 8 e p ‘J? By :1.:,.'\“..‘: i e s . 3 %TS 3 SRR B ey R B SERA ¥ SEmE RS .a:,u.. ekl R ¥ eiy = ee T R T gAL S e PN L N bNS Pl le - asow e S “ , FORGR “f*“ Tv vt \;.-';;».;»(.’-v':‘ Ragee 4 iLR 888 .08 RN RAR PR i v %& 5 :yv" A Q“\li TN e i )1\?1:\:&[»% . ;\ od B RSN -- Ry e P s T w 0 AR ORI g W.} R S Py - Y Sgh B 9 ‘\% %1) p ¥ e P e \‘_-')::., 5 RRB f! PR SRR g .'f‘ e AR SR R ; R SR O BN i > m’f’&i*’\a, X 3 *@ ol Ye ? R R 5 »fiz&m 2 ‘ Revised d i '3 v‘ C oL "¢ / B gy T drawing, from The Chur € lurchman, New Y hman, New York. Urique Carving Fork. The contrivance shown in the ae companying illustration resembles a pair of pliers, but it is not. It is a carving fork which the inventor, a Michigan man, claims is a great im provement over the carving forks now in common use. Again, it might be mistaken for a pair of scissors, being of similar construction, with the ex ception that when the handles are drawn together the shanks still re main apart. At the end of each , / / é . ,/ > shank are the prongs. When it is desired to hold the meat to be carved the handles are swung apart, causing the prongs to do likewise. The shanks are then placed at opposite sides of the meat and the handles drawn together. With the aid of this utensil the meat can be securely held, the grip increasing in proportion to the grip exerted upon the handles, The prongs being prevented from contracting, they cannot cut or crush the meat.—Washington Star. - ; *L B eataeieta T R Pttt AR SRR SRR ee T Rv L L eSR R P i L e S R b T o SRR S e, RS SAN R ERER et LS SRR eR s LA e ";'hwe.-,m_J‘_e‘,fev:‘-v‘,a'.i&:'i‘ifi iR e e eR e B iseseriesats f’.“i“f.i}‘i‘f\‘u-‘,rt&y;;u,»n;,». eeR R R ‘-">~i-";‘5‘("“31{:’.7“'{"':"&;"!\":—5:.@3: Pl Rt ‘—‘f‘{f{-_,,\,?:?Eu‘.ta.u@u"_(»r;p' BN ) T MVR AT, S Saraßy | fl‘:: 'l“::afg‘fl;é?:fix-i:mg‘s( s et ‘h"z,—;‘;\“f&""c’_“’\",“;ru b :\"-::a'.firi‘:-':’;n:i‘vfik\_‘r e R r@‘:“:‘l’"j?\\“ “E’VL i B S TR el e RLR R g ERRaEe R S R o St it SRR O a 0 gSR TR QM;% i A x,flmv*n"l R i eAN e ‘w»m;"“:‘ L e SuR it B T w? 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I, R (\}fe;gig('_\é?ifiijifi"’_& R SRR b e \ % g&u’ oRtT eSR e 05t Pl fentie bet el =apr LB o 2 beRNS oPR o ;’:' e )E‘ et it REstRE 3'!-395“’- B, B e B S BT i o AR NS o e R S R RIS e 2 : S RR T Sst el etk st RT R R o .;:;3}: Fin A SR s BRI eVR B R R AN R R R e AR S R eRN LTt o s g ofsra; 'r,.“‘-'!m}h 2 e £o B R e : eses TT T s ;C‘l‘-%--;“;‘-\‘t,ffic?'-: 5= e~,‘-_‘--’s‘-3‘-§‘-‘: SN : iee e o sl e R s TE p R 2 HrRE RN gseAl et . S ey gAR Aty k-vn;"".,_\; oo Y Sttt e teata e, Pt LR LBASO e G el Ri Wy > SRR PR RoeTeeeet (e eS SR SAUSSPPIe e-=% M R I IBT Tet3l siasireiatieatid lel Restamey| G eTR MR RSt SR L AR Sl dteauy 3 S, ReY AR e Rl T EA&Y} Fed el e A A AN T GE e < OPRCR y ‘ o 'EORGE VON L. MEYE Of \I 4o ‘AL‘A\LR’ g Massachusetts. Parachute Thrillers. Among the latest ‘‘thrillers” is the triple parachute leap, in which one aeronaut uses three different para chutes before reaching earth. He leaves the balloon in his downward flight with a red parachute, but after falling a short distance liberates it and makes a second plunge through space with a white parachute. This feat is repeated again after another drop, and he finally lands with a blue parachute. . Another ‘“‘thriller” is a double par achute leap from the same balloon, in which a man and woman race to earth in parachutes which fa 11,500 or 600 feet before opening out.—Popu. lar Mechanics. _ Hardy Newspaper Men. In forty-eight years no editor has been received as a patient at the Longview Hospital, of Cincinnati, and only one reporter. In that time the hospital has treated 2159 housewives, 1264 laborers, 553 domestic servants, 580 other servants, 305 farmers, 249 clerks, 141 carpenters, 135 mer chants, 135 tailors, 131 painters; 136 shoemakers, 89 cigarmakers, T 8 salesmen, 75 machinists, 64 cabinet makers, 58 teamsters, 55 butchers, 52 bakers, 49 coopers, 48 saloon keep ers, 47 soldiers, 46 school! teachers, 42 printers, 39 lawyers, 30 physi cians, 30 firemen and 28 policemen, —Boston Transcript. Shows World's Advancement. Methodist ministers in the United States are to-day preaching in more languages, it is said, than were used after the miracle of Pentecost. Owing to a shortage in small coins seven tons of pennies were turned out in a single day by an English mint.