Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, May 21, 1908, Image 7

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William Newberry of Quincy, Mich, is 95, but he has never useq spectacleg to read or work with. e R S To Drive Out Malaria ang Build Up : the System Take the Old Standard Groves TASTE LESS CHILL Toxic. Youa know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on everg bottle, showing it is simply Qui nineand Irvn in a tasteless form, and the most _effectual form. IKor grewn people and children, 50c. Bty i y A woman is never surprised when she is handed a compliment. S H. H. GREEN'S So~s, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. Bee their liberal offer in advertise. went in another eolumn of this paper. It’s surprising how well most saift less people manage to get along, Mrs. Winsiow's Soothing Syrupior Chilaren teething,sottensthegmns,t'educesinflamma.- tion, allays pain,cures wind colig_fific abottla With the exception with those that are still-born, kind words never gie, FOUND THE CAUSE. After Six Years of Misery and Wrong Treatment, John A. Enders, of Robertson Ave nue, Pen Argyl, Pa., suffered for six e years with stinging EXY N\ pain in the back, vio o # lent headaches and C@EE Y ) dizzy spells, and was fa" / assured by a specialist B/ that his kidneys were See sLo all right, though the “\‘\\i\;\:rt;';\x;j:-j‘-f“' t=/ secretions showed a NS reddish, brick - dust sediment. Not satisfied, Mr. Enders started using ‘Doan’s Kidney Pills. “The kidneys began to act more reg ularly,” he says, “and in a short time I passed a few gravel stones. I felt better right away, and since then have had no kidney trouble.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. AT THE PLAY. “The play was full of complications, I understand.” “Yes; first we got the wrong seats, I mislaid my overcoat, and the girl I took finally located next to a gentle man friend who monopolized her en tire conversation.”—Louisville Courler- Journal. BTATE OoF Omio, Crry oF ToLEpO, )., & : Lucas County, { FRAXEK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is genior partner of the firm of F.J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of ONE HUNDRED DOI.- LARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL’S CATARRH CURE. lymxx J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my i)srggence, this 6th day of December, A. D, 1886. A. W. GLEASON EAEA’L& : Notary Public, ll’s Catarrh Cureistakeninternally,and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. ¥. Jv CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by ‘all Druggists, 75¢. . Take liall’s_ Famgfily Pills for constipation, ‘ Newest and Biggest Clock. The largast clock in the worll will be "installed in a few da,):d,{-t‘ho‘ “Jersey City soap factory of Colgate & Co. The dial will be 38 feét in diameter, with an area of 1,134 square feet. The minute hand, which isclßl4 feet long, and weighs nearly a third of a ton, is so large that a special flat-car will be required to transport it to Jersey City. When placed on the dial, this hand will travel at the point 23 inches a minute and more than half a mile a day. The dial of this clock’s mnearest competitor, that on the City Hall in Philadelphia, is only 25 feet in diameter and 490 square feet in area. At night the clock will be illumin. ated by the numerals and hands being outlined with incandescent electric lJamps, and it will be possible to read the time from it several miles away, —New York Times, Turtle Soup For All 1 view with unspeakable loathing “The Simple Life.” I deem it a meor bid recrudescence of a bad ancestry which ruined its digestion by sur feit or starvation and transmitted the disease to its offspring. It is the relic of mediaeval mysticism and religious individualism, Of course, the fact is that under a rational system there would be champagne and turtle soup for all the heads and gastronomic or gans that could stand such “potent herbs.”—Victor Grayson, M.P., in the Labor Leader, FIT THE GROCER Wife Made the Suggestion. A grocer has excellent opportunity to know the effects of special foods on his customers. A Cleveland gro cer has a long list of customers that have been helped in health by leaving off coffee and using Postum Food Coffee. He says, regarding his own exper ierce: “Two years ago I had been drinking coffee and must say that I was almost wrecked in my nerves. *“Particularly in the morning I was so irritable and upset that I could hardly wait until the coffee was served, and then I had no appetite for breakfast and did not feel like attend ing to my store duties, “One day my wife suggested that inasmuch as [ was selling so much Postum there must be some merit in it and suggested that we try it. 1 took home a package and she pre pared it according to directions. The result was a very happy one. My nervousness gradually disappeared, and to-day I am all right. I would advise every one affected in any way with mnervousnezs or stomach trou bles, to leave off coffee and use Pos tum Food Coffee.” ‘‘There’s a Rea son.” 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. THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. C. D. CASE, PH. D, Theme: Perseverance. = ‘ Brooklyn, N. Y.—For his final ser mon before going to Buffalo to be come the pastor of the Delaware Ave nue Baptist Church, the Rev. C. D. Case, Ph. D., in the Hanson Place Baptist Church, took as his subject “The Rewards of Perseverance.” The text was those passages found in the Book of Revelation, 2:7, 11, 17,20;27; 3:5,1% and 21, describing the rewards of overcoming. Dr. Case said: | The word “overcome” is a martial term. It implies an enemy, a conflict, a victory. It suggests the soldier of Christ fighting against spiritual forces of wickedness and arrayed in the helmet of salvation, the breast plate of righteousness, the girdle of truth, the sandals of the gospel of peace, the sword of the Spirit and the shield of faith. It presents the Chris tian life, not in terms of rest and en joyment, association and_ service, but of struggle. It is a word for the pres ent, a clarion call to achievement. The victorious crusade of the Chris tian is not here pictured as coming only at the end of life. A desperate encounter with evil is to be met with, not only at the time of conversion and the time of death, bhut unceasingly through life. There is no thought of truce or furlough, no suggestion of recuperation or dress-parade. There is to be no day of retreat. It is the contest of the individual against his enemies. The message is to the church, the task is personal. The heart is the citadel, and the ap proaches are the source of constant attack. The flesh is weak, even though the spirit is willing. There is a conflict between the law of God and the law of sin in our members. Even though Christ be c¢nthroned in the life, the outposts will be repeatedly assailed. The success of the church depends upon the faithfulness of the individual members. The seven promises to the churches as given by Christ repeat the history of the race up to the founding of the throne of David, the period of Is raelitish history most symbolical of the kingdom of God. The world’s history begins with the tree of life which is forbidden to the parents of the race. Then .follows as striking providences of God the punishment of death and the promise of the Deliv erer, the giving of the tables of stone and the heavenly manna, the repeated victories over the national enemies, the enrollment of the heroes of war, the building of the great temple and the establishment of the throne of David forever. God’s plan is one and the salvation to be given in the final award is but the culmination of God’s eternal purpose. What God will do for us at last is to be seen in the his tory of the race in prophetic promise. The first promise, found in Revela tion 2:8, is: “To him that overcom eth, to him will I give to eat of the tree of life, which is the paradise of God.” Thus are connected the be ‘ginnijpg ang the end of history even as CRrist Mimself is the Alpha and Omega, the first and the last. Yet the %second Paradise differs widely from the first. In the passage of the text, Paradise is Heaven, not the in termediate state, and it is presented not as a garden where two human be ings are surrounded by the luxuries of nature, but a city throbbing with life, teeming with multitudes. Not isolation but association, is the strik ing feature. The tree of life is the fulfillment of the spiritual meaning of the prayer, “Give us this day our daily bread.” As the tree of life bears twelve manner of fruits, yielding its fruit every month, so life abundant is the reward of victory. And life is more than mere existence; it is wealth of thought, it is richness of companionship, it is the acme of un selfishness, it is the larger life when “comes the statelier Eden back to man,” when family, society, govern ment, national and international, is the creation of God-fed and God-led children of men. The second promise is that the vie tor shall not be hurt of the second death. There is a first death and a second death, though the term second death is not mentioned in the Gospels or epistles. But Christ Himself tells us not to fear him who can destroy the body, but rather fear Him who can cast both soul and tody into hell. The first death is the heritage of the race, and is not directly the punish ment of individual sin. Even Christ became obedient unto death, though He knew no sin. Neither sickness nor death may mean that either a man or his parents have sinned. The second death is the exact result of sin, It is for the fearful and unbe lieving and abominable and murder ous and whore mongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all liars. The first is momentary in its effects, the sec ond eternal. The Smyrna Christians were bit terly persecuted, but Christ promises them freedom from the second death. The church is challenged because it makes its rewards future. Wrongs need present righting, says the critic; what we want is Heaven on earth. True, very true, but the ideal for earth is Heaven. As long as the sense of immortality is in man, as long as there remain unavenged wrongs on earth, as long as any individual life passes out into the great unknown with present hopes thwarted, as long as the successes of transitory years dissatisfy, so long shall we need the prospect of a Heaven where neither the first nor the second death shall enter, 1 A third reward of perseverance is the hidden manna, and the white stone inscribed with the secret new‘ name. 7The very name of “manna” carries the mind back to that period | of hunger when God rained down from Heaven the sustaining food. The real meaning of this miracle is revealed when Christ says: “I am the bread of life which came down out of Heaven.” It is Christ that sustains. Not only is His life the ideal but His companionship the inspiratioi, Christ is unseen, but His preszence no less real and more vital than the friend seen at our side. Christ as the bread of life is “hidden manna,” because the | process of partaking of Christ is as unseen as the assimilation ¢f food, and the assurance of salvation is a matter between the soul and Christ alone., “Blessed are those that hun; ger and thirst after righteousness. There is nothing that satisfies the hungry soul but Christ. Then there is that secret name in scribed on the white stone. There are many interpretations of its meaning, such as that the stone is a ticket of admission or a vote of acquittal. But, after all, the believer with his hidden manna has a new heart. There is both a new power of assimilation and a new food to be assimilated. . The old law was written on two tables of, stone, but the new law, so Ezekiel declares, is to be written on the heart. Forced obedience is to be changed into a second nature that voluntarily does right. The believer is not free from the law, but he does naturally what the law requires. There is but one secret for this marvelous trans formation, and that is, Christ. For me to live is Christ, says Paul. In stead of the ten commandments we have the name of Jesus inscribed on our hearts. He who lives the Christ life obeys the law without compul sion. What better comparison can we make between the old and the new dispensation, the old law and the new grace? Here is the “secret of the Lord.” Human finiteness can only vaguely understand God’s omniscience. Hu man ignorance needs a journal and a ledger. God needs many books by which righteous judgment shall be given. He needs a book of life by which no mistake may be made in condeming the innocent and saving the wicked. He has a book of re membrance for those that fear the Lord and think upon His name; the wanderings of the persecuted are numbered and his tears are all re corded. The great day of judgment is simply the opening of the books and the reading of a reward or pun ishment already d.termined upon. Blessed are those whose names are written in the Lamb’s book of life. Originally, probably, the idea of a book of registry arose from the mu ‘nicipal list of Jerusalem. “It shall come to pass that he that is left in Zion and he that remalneth in Jerusa lem shall be called holy, even every ‘one that is written among the living in Jerusalem.” Evidently the man ‘whose citizenship is in Heaven, and ‘who being risen with Christ seeks ‘those things that are above, is thus ‘registered in the new Jcrusalem. The ‘people at Sardis had a name that ‘they lived, but they were dead. A church registration is not always syn ‘onymous with a Heavenly registra tion. “Remember, therefore, and re pent.” Not professors, but posses sors, count with God. The sixth promise of the risen Christ is that the victor shall be a ‘pillar in the temple inscribed with the name of God, Heaven and Jesus. In Solomon’s porch there were two pillars, one marked Jachin, “He shall establish,” and the other Boaz, “in his strength.” lln the church militant not all are pillars. Paul declares that James, Peter and John were consid ered to be pillars. But in the new temple of God all are pillars, not only columns of support, but also monu ments commemorating the great deeds of the past. The saved of Heaven shall record salvation ”%fi grace and be “songs without m@ in I]}raise of G;g . hoorg e . Upon each pillar shall he Ahd g pee of Goos, of tla}gew Jer ":"‘t: (S “mine own n®% name.” What néew name? Emmanuel, “God with us? Redeemer, the one who has purchased our redemption? Jesus, the name precious to every believer? We do not know; still, as the name signifies the' personality, so we shall receive that name of Jesus, which answers to our own inner experience. What we are then will be what Christ has been to us. The Father will see re flected in us the looks of Christ; His image and superscription will be on us. The last promise is to the Laodi ceans—"“He that overcometh, I will give to him to sit down with Me in My throne as I also overcame and sat down with My Father in His throne.” When Napoleon had been appointed emperor by the senate, the ceremony took place in 1804 accord ing to the solemn ceremonial of the ‘Holy Roman Empire. Pius VII. had taken the crown from the altar ready to place it upon Napoleon’s head, when the latter seized it and put it on his head himself. Christ seized no crown for Himself. In that He humbled Himself, God highly exalted Him. Now He in turn exalts the one who humbled himself and gives life to him who is willing to lose it. Sov ereignty—that is, victory, authority, mastery—belongs to those who over come with Christ. Whoever, hearing Christ at the door knocking, and then opens the door, shall admit a Com panion who will bind fellowship by a common meal. Such a one now en joying friendship with Christ in Hig humility shall enjoy it with Christ in His glory. sAU el : Bound to Go Right, Rev. Mark Guy Pearse says that many years ago he sat with Rev. Charles Spurgeon on the platform at Spurgeon’s Tabernacle, and in an in terval during the meeting he whis pered to Mr. Spurgeon, “When 1 was a young fellow in London, I used to sit right over there and hear you preach, and you will never know how much good you did me. I cannot for get,” says Mr. Pearse, “the bright light that came into his face as he turned to me and said, ‘You did?’ ” “Yes,” replied Pearse, “and I am 80 glad to have the chance of telling you of it. You used to wind me up like an eight-day clock; I was bound to go right for a week after hearing you.” He put out his hand and took that of Mr. Pearse, and the tears brimmed to his eyes as he said, “God bless you! I never knew that.” The Sure Refuge. The historian, Guizot, set out as a free-thinker. He said, “Reason will solve all.” But as his yecrs increased he found himself in a whirlwind of conflicting doubts and perplexities, and finally, with unspeakable joy, he fled to the authority of the Scriptures as the Word of God.—Home Heraid, et et e, e ———— Suicidal Business, That business, however remunera tive it may be, which takes all one's time, and leaves no opportunity for the culture and growth of the soul, is eternally suicidal.-—The Rev, Charles Bayard Mitchell, Cleveland. . THE EGOTIST. ' He—Well, my dear, 1 had my life insured today. She—That's just like you—always thinking of yourself.-—Pathfinder, FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, $2 trial bottle and treatise frec. Dr, H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. If the worst comes to the worst, cheers the Baltimore American, good Marylanders can get out their fishing lines and quit eating beef. Hicks’ (‘z\‘pfidl;le_Ctx—ro:\»\;(Tmen's Montnly Paine, Backache, Nervousness, and Headache. It's Liquid. Efiects imme. diately. Prcscrlhed by physicians with best results. 10c., 25¢., and 50c.. at drug stores. He is a lucky man who doesn't be- Heve in luck, P DG e SOFT CORNS BETWEEN THE TOES Are often more painful than the hard ones on top. ABBOTT'S KAST INDIAN CORN PAINT will cure either kind,as well as bunions,sore, callous spotsa and indurations of the skin, ' ‘lt eures to stay cured.” 25c, at druggists or by mail. Tre Aszorr Co., Savannah, Ga, The. beauty of some women is only cosmetic deep, SEVERE BLEED!NG YEMORRHOIDS, BSores, and Itching kczema-—Doctor Thought an Operation Necessary —Cuticura's Efficacy Proven. “I am now eighty ycars old, and three years ago I was taken with an attack of piles (hemorrhoids). bleeding and protrud ing. The doctor said the only help for me was to go to a hospital and be operated on. I tried several remedies for months but did not get much help. During this time sores appeared which changed to a terrible itch iing.gezema. Then T began to use Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills. injecting a quantity of Cuticura Ointment with a Cuti cura Suppository Syringe. It took a month of this treatment to get me in a fairly healthy state and then T treated myself once a day for three menths and, after that, once or twice a week. The treat ments I tried took a lot of money, and it is fortunate that T used Cuticura. .J. 11. Henderson, Hopkinton, N. Y., Apr. 26, 07.” " Socialists celebrated in Berlin the anniversary of the Revolution of 1848, Red was the prevailing color display ed by the ce-lewn.ts. Garfield Tea, Nature's mild Herb laxative, agreeably stimulates the liver, overcomes constipation, rids the blood of impurities and clears the complexion. All druggists. “When a man remembers the love letters he has written,” says the Wash.- ington Post, “he is convinced that he’s a fool.” = DEATH TO RING WORM,. “Everywhere I go I speak for TETTERINE, because it cured me of rln?worm in its worst form. My whole chest from neck to walst was raw as beef; but TRTTERINE cured me. It also cured a bad case of piles.”” 8o says Mrs, M. F. Jones of 28 Tannehill Bt., Pittsburg, Pa. | TETTERINE, the great skin remedy,%a sold by dm'fglstn or sent by mail for 50c. Write J. T. SHUPTRINE, Dept. A, Bavannah, Ga. i . The rainbow chaser at least gets a ‘rug fop'lily pioney. . ; Tumfi:‘@\@?@ &gy mowi (offee \ £22, Remarkable for its Quaury &7 . Remarkable for its Fine Fuavor ,/5 @)) Remarkable for ifs K\@ & DousLeSTRENGTH £2 ' and Most Remarkable &%) '- “' " forils MoDERATE PRicE gfi i / D %5, US| UZANNE @ X wovwmowsy 24 &S Sopsiviaowy A @’ WILLYOU BEWITHOUT T @ & ALLGOOD GROCERS SB/ 5 EVERYWHERE SELL T @lumm(omn@ 25CTS —1 LB CAN &2 THE REILY-TAYLOR COMPANY NEW ORLEANS. USA. e~ MOTHER GRAY'S R SWEET POWDERS -+ FOR CHILDREN, G & niination, Hepdnghes LY Htomach ‘l“:’:.nbleu,' %.eel‘inng' . {lvlnorde'fhl, and De-(grc:ly Mother Gray, grms. w‘!r‘g-,k up olde ROl ot Al ek, New York Oity._A. S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N. Y. An Atlanta man has been granted a patent for an “educational appliance.” Rod or 'rithmetic? asks the Journal. BOWEL TROUBLES CHILDREN TEETHING g 4 X Ui sy | A g o 4 2 g . Y T 5 A v A 0 2 j R i AR PR A I 3 A RAR G Y R e R " L ‘ ¥ 0 f 7 Ut G Brrigg ) R bl i B 4 B 1. » f L 0 lIN 1 £, ' ? ; ! 0 g TN ' A i e g ey oy b F W 0 ) 4 - N oy widrs ARRA i A 1 | " i 3 | e i ol W " k) 4 ] { ' W ! Al / i g L S% ] WLy ¢ . L 4 (%4 A Vs i -f"',j"‘- A ) G B y e ) 4 W ) N ey Fith QL P ¢ 4 y Yy L 7% TERERTs ) a 3 f ) TN R Oey » O ) i ¥ I SS L e YTR T oTR o DAI 5 RWA RS TAh R AL i X o Akl ! ettt Keep it in the house always ready for use. It brings quick relief from constilpation, andovercomes tendency to chronic indigestion and other stomach troubles., Not drastic nor violent in its action like calomel and other drugs, but quick, thorough and gentle. Stimulates the torpid liver to normal action. Cleanses the blood. neglected liver is 2 menace. 't endangers life itself when it fails to perform its proper functions. NUBIAN TEA is the best liver regulator t'ym.x can get. Thishas been proven by hundreds whohave testified to its efficiency. Mrs. L. Edwards, of V:ckgzburlg, Miss., says: ‘‘Your Nubian Tea has proved wonderful in my family, and I wolud not be withoutit. The childrenlike to takeit.’’ Dealers zell it. Manufactured by SPENCER MEDICINE COMPANY, Chattanocoga, Tenn, Color more £oods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers, They dye In cold water better than any other dye. You san dye any garmeut without rippiug apart, Write for free booklet—How w 0 Lye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG COU., Quincy, ilinols, N | e BB [ s ‘r"é»'fii‘ e Tyt ?&\.‘N R L RN o iy vermmm— g N VAR & B ‘?(-: TR ‘3} «&&3% ‘ LAR @ iy AEE ) SRS O RAEO it Y 5 h'.‘;\'u’%/ S 754’5.”"‘ 3>;§ IAN B, S LAy L e AN AR sl 0 e d s e 43 I‘)\ SRR INEY A w 7 (g B\ .;_.'\"':\s}4' s/o srpel \'fll" .‘ 1 \ o Bo N R NS ! N ‘r"‘/' ‘ ‘. Av' R g B O RN A r PRI (T gt 7 PR \\&&\ LAY Sel (e Thousands of American women in our hemes are daily sacrificing their lives to duty. In order to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dressed and tidy, women overdo. A female weakness or displacement is often brought on and they suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, knowing well that they ought to have help to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. 1t is to these faithful women that LYDIA E. PflM&(HAM’% VEGETABLE COMPOUN comes as a boon and a Dblessing, as it did to Mrs. ¥. Elisworth, of Mayville, N. Y., and to Mrs. W. P, Boyd,of Beaver Falls, Pa., who say : “I was not able to do my own worl, owing to the female trouble from which I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound helped me wonderfully, and I am so well that I can do as big a day’s work as 1 ever did. I wish every sick woman would try it. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, Eas been the standard remedy for female ills ~and has positively cured thousands of - women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, - periodic pains, backache, &zit bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. ' Why don’t you try it ? . Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick - women to write her for advice. ' She has guided thousands to health. -’.*..(ldressL Lynn, Mass. j (At2l-'08) £ sty Bt (uie ; a3y Your entire weight rests on the bottom of your shoes. The SKREEMER shoe is fashioned to give an even distribution of this weight, allowing the feet to remain as nature intended. Look for the label. If you do not find these shous readily, write us for directions how to secure them. FOR MEN. y g " : & ) B - «w;ai-u: . s !'MGL i &b ! B . e @-ml,[w,',;; AT / o e | ;;rf,'f.i}’;“.'- G L T LTR RTINS —_=""""—, "'} BUYS A HIGH GRADE DROP HEAD W $45 SEWING MACHINE /&4’ N Vi A A e | ’(&'-" , 9 Bilent—Easy Running—Life Time Guarantee, k. 4 ‘IV' ¥ The Industrious Hen is the leading poultry journal of o l‘ z “ the Bouth—6oc one year. Three years 11. Agents wanted, ¥ 4sr o\ Samples free. Maoilne cireulars free, [ 7 Y 2 #EP The Industrious Hen Co., Dept. A, Knoxville, Tenn. R : ) of S 0 2 . ¢ A ’ ’ ‘\"‘ . 'l‘ ARoßde : ek § k- o g gl 5 B i e e By L))l § By 9 8 b [— SHOES AT ALL 8 Vadliey ) 8 g PRICES, FOR EVERY 1 RN 7 4 f MEMBER OF THE FAMILY, N G, e ’ Mw,'.ao‘v’s. WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. B 2 \., o . L, Douglas malkes and solis moero <F-n B M 7 /i A B men’s 32.52. 33.00 and sfl.lfl,:occ‘m Wik i : L,: than any ot manufacturer tlr O B A ea"‘,'z;:“ Pe™ world, %czauu they bhold thelr "G %) ?':,gt.—:‘;fi/ K rard :hanol f 'o(lor.'wo:: lonpor‘." ’;d B\G2 2 Colop, re o eoafer value than a P~ »y Vi) eß> FEvelets, e Ghoos fl'm- world to-day. s “@ oi o ,U{ff:lmi W.L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price . fl‘?l”l. |(7Au r"nt()}v. dw'l L. Dougias name and price is sltmnpnvlr "'h,'r""}}’,"linv";;fr!‘ :f)m:’ :-(n,:nl:‘tlt’thtuo..' ( ) 0 Doy 0 3 o s . trated Zméfoé ’t'r:a‘l;:w:.: fifirfi‘.’i”"‘“f b N ma.le‘tvt'rri‘n: InNDIYGLA'S. Brockton, Mags. et es e | S 20 et . 8 e 8 . A . e ee. 45 . . | Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial Nevor fails to relieve at once. It is the favorite baby medicine of the best nurees and family doctors. Mothers everywhere stick to it, and urge their friends to give it to Ohkildren for Colie, Dysentery, Orsmps, Diarrhoea, Flux, }sl‘nul-fltnmmth and all Ht.umxwil and Bowel Ailments. You can depnnd on it. Don't worry, but take Dr. Biggers Huckleberry &'mlllL 25 conts at drag stores, or by mail, Oirenlars I‘l"ea. HALTIWANGER TAYLOR DRUG CO., Atlanta, Ga. { .. A Severe Sentenca, 1 Tord Eskgrove, a ©Scotch judge, while described as learned in the old law of Scotland, was given to saying hndicrous and absurd things when pre siding in court. On one occasion, when condemning the accused to death for having murdered a soldier, the judge aggravated the offence thus: “And not only did you murder him whereby he was bereaved of his life, but you did thrust, or push, or pierce, or project, or propel the letial weap on through the bellyband of his regiy mental breeches, which were his ma jesty's.”—The American Lawyer. RHEUMATISM! SAL-TORA, The Wonderful Remedy, Sent FT€e. saaress DR. SMITH CHEMICAL CO., 5146 Market, Phila., Pés PILES — o eol s adkecs matled 1oc; Don't & fier; send dime to-day. JOHN GROVIEK, 1033 Sp.ing Garden Street, Philadelphia, Pa. (L CURED 3 3 e Gives N = Quick % ¢ Relief. - gy Removes all swelling in Btozo days; effects a permanent cure A & in 30to 60 dayvs. Trialtreatment fl(v‘i _J‘tn given free. Nothingcan be fairer h«"i‘f\ A Write Dr. K. H. Green's Sons, PR gram Specialists, Box @ Atlarta, ¢Ga 20 MULE TEAM IN A NEW PACKAGE S lbs. Most economical to buy. All dealers. Save the package tops: each are worth 12 coupons in exchange for presents. Premium List free of PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO., N. Y. “i,‘” g.‘ f o ‘t“? oSV e @ 3 " RiE Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from une healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disine fecting and deodor izing toiletrequisite | of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample THE PAXTON TOILET €O, Boston, Mass. A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarette and Tohacco Habits, Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION. Administered by Specialists for thirty years. Correspondence confidential. The Only Keeley Institute in Georgia. 229 Woodward Ave., ATLAI‘?TA, GA. OVE-TAILED PUTTY LOCK SKSH Randall Bros, ~gt