Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, August 13, 1908, Image 7
E\?p "'-[ 2l WIETA FOR. o $2 fl | faad [ ) fif’&ffifi,« SRR A P MY c"fi"}&& EAp " s S RSR A % 2 % g,u%g;':}& AND S ~afis’;fi 3 Frisn S e wfig?s;;u*“ ~ E g 4 PG .fi‘i:.%‘»rs:;u’% 7 s ¢ Lty ~;.)*V,‘,t:'“&g » % i ’?-“1 \ Sl . >y N DSEOR o B FEREN AP '¥ S P - (?;'&Q?flfw; 2 Y Shade For Hogs. 1f hogs are to thrive in pasture shade must be provided. Some far mers cut away every vistage of shade, The hog loves a cool, damp shade where he can lie and snooze during the heat of the day. If left in a pasture with no shade he wiil suffer. E¢perience of prominent breeders showg, however, that a mud wallow is by no means necessary. If the hog cannot have a clean bath, no bath is preferable, but Sus is a child of the soil and he should have cool, | moist ground to lie upon.— American Cultivator. 1 S————— \ A Scheme For Testing Sceds. ‘ For the ordinary planter the well known ‘‘dinner plate” tester, made with two soup or dinner plates and one or more moist strips of sterilized cotton goods, preferably cotton flan nel, will be found to answer all pur roses, The cotton strips are steri lized in /boiling water to destroy spores of molds and other fungi pres ent, folded twice upon themselves and placed in one of the plates. The seeds are now laid between the folds For testing several varieties at once. of cloth so as not to touch each other, and the second plate is inverted over the first, this forming a moist, aerat ed and more or less sterile chamber. The cotton strips must be kept well moistened, but not saturated, prefer ably with water that has been steri lized by boiling, and allowed to cool before using. - Two or three lots of seeds may be tested in the sgenerator at one time, but each should be con tinued in a separate cotton strip and numbered to avoid error. When, however, it is desirable to make several germinating tests at cne 2, R .55 N A - Pan Germinator. ee g e time or when many varieties are to be tested, instead of duplicating the plate germinators already described the writer found the following ger minator, suggested by Dr. Volney Spaulding, formerly of the Univer sity of Michigan, to be superior: A deep granite bread pan six or eight inches wide was obtained in which was kept about one-fourth inch of water. Cotton flannel strips of any convenient length, two or three yards, and of the width of the pan, were tucked crosswise at intervals of five inches. Short galvanized wires about an inch longer than the width of the pan were inserted through these tucks and gathered together, thus forming the cotton strips into numerous folds or loops which were suspended in the pan above the water by means of the supporting wires. The ends of the strips being left sufficiently long to touch the water in the pan, the entire piece of cloth composing the loops, in which the seeds are placed, is kept uniformly moist, The cloth should be moistened be fore beginning the experiment and, it is needless to add, sterilized. A definite number of seeds taken as they come from an average sample are counted out for each germination. For seeds in rather small lots, as garden seeds, fifty to a hundred will answer, while for the cereals, grasses, clover and others used in exten sive cultural operations about 200 should be used and the tests dupli cated when any doubt exists about the results. The tests should be ex amined from day to day and the sprouted ones removed and counted, the number being recorded on a sheet of paper. The length of time required for germination is dependent upon sev eral factors, chief of which are mois ture, temperature, vitality and vari etal differences, six to ten days being sufficient for most kinds. When tests are macde during the winter or early spring months, at which time it is usually most convenient, the germi nation should be conducted in a mod erately warm room so that the tem perature will not fall below fifty de grees F. at night and remain hetween seventy and eighty degrees F. dur ing the day. In the case of alfalfa and certain other of the clover fam ily a small percentage of the seeds will remain apparently sound at the close of the germination test. Allow ance is usuallly made for these, one third being counted as viatle— i. e., capable of growth. Cauliflower, eab bage, turnip and beet seeds of poor stock—i, e., run out—are just as viable as those of good stock. The only means of remedying this defect is to use selected home grown seeds or to buy the best stock of reliable seed houses.—J. J. Thornber, in New York Witness, Iron Sulphate Will Destroy Weeds, At last weeds may be eradicated without the trouble of pulling them up by hand at the expense of time end an aching back. The magical eradicator of these pests of the gar dener and farmev is sulphate of iron br o green vitriol. This will shrivel up the rank growths, while the grass will thrive. The sulphate, which comes in the form of green crystals, is dissolved in water for application to the per nicious weeds. A couple of pounds to the gallon is said to be about the right quantity to settle the fate of the most determined lawn dandelion that grows. Wild mustard requires a stronger dose, and the farmer who goes on the warpath after this com mon destroyer is advised to use tr&n seventy-five to 100 pounds of the stufi for each fifty-two gallons of water and then go forth for a whole sale slaying. The. solution is not to be applied with an ordinary can. It probably would eat the can with more avidity than it eats weeds even. A spraying machine is necessary. The introduc tion of Mr. Sulphate to Mr. Weed is performed in the tender youth of the latter, when he is unsophisticated and about four inches high. The pres ence of a good, bright sun is said ‘to help the matter along, and if it hap® pens to be in the early morning when the dew is still on the ground, why, S 0 much the better. The sulphate works in a slow and leisurely fash ien, and for the first day or so the intruders continue to stand up and pretend they like it. On the second day, however, they lose heart and am bition. ° They become mourning weeds, the chief mourners at their own funeral, The process has been tried on the wheatfields at the North Dakota sta tion as well as ia fiax culture in Min nesota. Some remarkable results are said to have been obtained at the Cornell station at Ithaca, N. Y. Sal phate is said algo to have established its usefulness in the oat fields of Wisconsin.—Weekly Witness. Millet, For best results millet should be given a rich, mellow soil, though it can be grown with varying success upon aimost any soil. Being a shal low-rcoted plant, and making its growth in a comparatively short time, it is exhaustive of the available plant food in the surface goil, and its reputation of being “hard on the land” has some basis in fact. Any deficiency in the fertility of land to be seeded in millet may be supplied with stable manure or sol uble commercial fertilizers. Seeding: Millet calls for an especi ally well . prepared seed bed. It should not be seeded until the soil has thoroughly warmed up and con tinued warm weather is assured. It may be seeded brozdcast and covered with a harrow, or drilled with an or dinary grain drill. The latter method is usually more satisfactory, giving a more even stand and requiring somewhat less seed. When drilled solid three pecks per acre is none too much seed for the fextail millets, It would be bet ter to use more rather than less. Thin seeding gives coarse plants which are especially undesirable in hay. When millet is grown for seed or for silage it is frequently drilled in rows far enough apart to permit inter tillage. Barnyard millet is seeded at a rate than above mentioned, usually about two pecks per acre when drilled solid. Earvesting: When wanted for hay, millet may be cut when the heads begin to appear, and so on until it is in bloom. The quality of the hay deteriorates rapidly as the seed develops. Cutting should never be delayed ,until the seed begins to ripen. Ripe' miliet hay is not ouly much less palatable and less diges tible, but the stiff hairs or beards are a source cf annoyance and even dan ger to the stock. Millet hay is made very much as timethy. As it is usually of ranker growth it takes somewhat longer to cure it. It is well to cure it in part in the swath and later leave it in the cock for a few days.—American Ohio Agricultural Experiment Sta ticn, Circular 81. Disking Alfalfa Fields, There are many good reasons why alfalfa fields should be thoroughly disked in the spring, and through the season. The gpring disking keeps the weeds back, loosens the surface, thereby conserving moisture and let ting the air and sunshine into the roots of the plants, and at the same time exposes the eggs of grasshop pers to the action of the elements whereby many of them are de stroyed. The addition of a dressing of barnyard manure before disking will act like a charm. Alfaifa draws nitrogen from the air, but it will not disdain to take it from any con venient source. Beside the nitrogen in manure, there is ammonia and potash which the plant needs in its pbusiness. Disking the manure into the ground makes it more readily available and prevents waste, Disk ing is to alfalfa what plowing is to corn.—¥rom the Farmers’ Home Journal. It is difficult in England to arouse an interest in the preservation of for ests because of the universal substi tution of coal for wood as Tuel. IRISH FARMS TOO , §§IALL FOR COMFORT. - 4Th|ir \ ;nlargemont Necessary -For Any Agricultural Develope ment--Sea Fisheries Planned. The Royal Commission on Conges tion in Ireland, which has been taking testimony for several yvears, has at last made its final report, and if its recommendations are accepted, and put in practice it will have justified the time spent on its work. The duty of the commission was to inquire into the conditions of the people in what are known as the “congested areas)” chi’efly in the west of Ireland, where the holdings of most of the farmers are too small to support life in any - degree of comfort, and to recommend ~aremedy. The following are some of the most striking extracts from the commission’s report: “The great majority of the people in the congested districts and neigh boring areas are dependent on the land for a living. The majority of the holdings in the west of Ireland ‘are inadequate for the support of *the occupiers, and their énlargement Is a condition precedent to any marked agricultural development. The Congested District Board should be continued and charged with the re lief of congestion in the province of Connaught, the counties of Donegal, Kerry, Clare and the four rural dis | tricts of Bantry, Castletown, Schull and Skibbereen, in County Cork. The board should have exclusive control over land purchase within their new area, and no estate, or part of an es tate should pass by direct sale from landlord to tenant except with their. consent, ‘“The commission estimates that to raise to an economic standard the holdings within the board's area which call for such treatment will in volve the acquisition of additional land with an annual valuation of $2,- 250,000. As the land available is limited and as the greater part of the area requires resettlement, the board should have power of acquir ing land by compulsion, and the pro vision c¢f holdings for landless men, or the enlargement of existing hold ings hevond the minimum economie standard, should be avoided. " “After agriculture, the commission thinks that the development of the sea fisheries off the western seaboard seems to offer the best hope of im proving the condition of the people. IThe possibility of the development i of large industries in the west seems to be limited. Boat building, barrel making, netmaking, the making .ot woolien goods, quarrying, kelpmaking, industries connected with peat and bacon curing, offer the best prospect of industrial development on a large scale. The board should be equipped to buy and resell land to the value of $5,000,000 each year. The income required by the board for carrying out its work is estimated to amount ‘to $15,000,000. o i “It is stated in the commission's report that despite the conditions of lif2 the death rate in the congested areas is low—a testimony to the vir ility of the race. Of the nine Irish counties with the lowest rate, Cavan is.the only one of which some part is not congested. The average death rate of the eight congested counties from 1891 to 1901 was 14.6 per thousand and that of the rest of Ire land 19.4. The birth rate was also higher (apart from Belfast and Dub lin), but the great emigration re sulted in a decrease of population more than double that of the rest of Ireland.” 3 I — ———— % Unexpected Hospitality, A couple o years ago a Governor cos one of the Southern States went to Palm Beach, Fla., for a short holiday. He registered at one of the magnifi cent hotels and was assigned to a Jux urious suite of rooms. He was com fortably installed when a friend came in to call on him. “This is a wonderful apartment’ they have given you,” said the vigitor. “Why, ves,” replied the Governor, “I've never enjoyed such luxury in my life. Never saw such a place! They just showed me to these rooms, but I've been wondering if they real ized that I was a poor man. What do you suppose they'll charge me?” ‘“Well, Governor,” answered the other, *‘l happen to know about that, The last man, a railroad president from New York, paid $75 a day for these very rooms.” “Ecissors to grind!” cried the un fortunate politician, *“l've only got SSO. I'll have to leave at once. But look here, Jim, I don't want to con-" fess I can’'t pay for at least one day, 80 you go down to the station and telegraph me to come home at ounce, I will meet you at the station within an hour.” When the Governor arrived at the station he found the friend waitiag as he had arranged. “You got my telegram all right?’”’ inquired the acquaintance, “Got it!” eaid the Governor in a despairing voice. *“I should say so. I believe I am the unluckiest man alive. Why, when I went to ask fcr my bill what do you suppos= the el=rk gaid? He told me there was no hill —said they would be honored if I stayed a year!” —R. W. Child, Ju, Lippincott’s. One on John, 2 Mre. Jones—-“0Oh, dear, I have just broken my rew gmelling-hottle.” Mr. Jones—*lt is like you. All your belonginge are either broken or shattered.” Mrs. Jones—"“Quite true, John, Even you are a bit cracked.” P- At arpwe Sy e L e vrr-v—'7""""""""""""W" . i & The Pinch Came ) % and our friend decided to cut down on his i"» SRR N ¥ grocery bills. He bought a pound of coffee 1’ ,}j R w A\ at 15 cents and 1t lasted exactly three days, ';__fl.;,_-",;fl:{ i\ —insipid, dish-watery stuff at that. Me went ST \ % AR back to LUZIANNE COFFEE at 25cts which g* SRR &oL ) always lasted a week, all the time delicions GIR § \ ,‘\ and satisfying. He lcarned the lesson that § ook I e \', e lower price does not atways speil economy, [ ¥ Wl S i\ HAVE YOU learned it yet? H e \‘l Ro2 ¥ "8 N LUZIANNE COFFEE The Relly-Taylor Co, W N Sold Everywhere NEW ORLEANS, U.S.A. \¢7 A".‘.‘.‘A_g,’d,‘,‘,““‘."—““_“.-‘ : Not of the Common Herd, t - Mrs, Caller—Are your new neigh-| bors refined? | Mrs, Nextdoor—l should say so.| They never horrow anything but sil-| ver and cut glass,—Chicago News, | CURES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS, | Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1207: I have had | eczema on my hands for 12 years, and have tried everyth{ng. I bave been using TETe TERINE 4 days and the results are great,” | Signed, Mrs. Al. Harvey. TETTERINE is the surest, safest, speadiest cure for eczema and all other skin diseases, Seld by druge gists or sent by mail for 50¢. by J. ’ly Snure TRINE, Dept, A, SBavannah, Ga. i Balley Willis, of the United States | Geoclogical Burvey, estimates the to tal amount of coal in North China at | 605,000,000,000 tons. | To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up ‘ » the System | Take the Old Standard Grove's TAsTe ' LESS CHILL ToNIC. Yoa know what you are mlnngo The formula is plainly grint.ed oneverg ttle, showing it is simply Qui- B o o Lorm, aad e m % g:; children. 50c. e v .. Blind love often transforms two lov. ers into a pair of spectacles, ‘GEE! DON'T THAT COXN HURT! Stop the pain and get rid of the corn quickly and permanently. ABBOTT'S EAST IN= "DIAN CORN PAINT Willremove any corn, bun log,mnllous spot without cutting, burn ing, or “eating’’ the flesh and leaves no Boreness afterwards. Applied with a brush; :ghty little trouble, 252, at druggists or by lfrom THE Assorr Co., Savannah, Ga. ‘ Occasionally a weak-voiced man uges strong language, } - FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL. Discharged Because Doctors Could s Not Cure. TLevi p. Brockway, 8. Second Ave., Anoka, Minn., says: ‘‘After lying for & i five months in a F o e \ hospital 1 was dis ;3’_‘,"{_-_-_:_- “.\ charged as incura “’f.,“ .1y ble, and given only s :/ /@§\ six months to live. %/, .7, 4My heart was affect ...-1,5,5; " 7 ed, 1 had smother . M 2/ ing spells and some & ‘k, #{, times fell uncon /- YW scious. 1 got so 1 BN '\ couldn’'t wuse my Ay \ ¥ \\\ arms, my eyesight i T wa3 impaired and ‘the kidney secretions were badly dis ordered. 1 was completely yorn out and %_pmsed -»w,b,emj“\bc§m using. ~Doan’s. Kidney Pills, but they went _right to the cause of the trouble and ~did their work well. [ have been feeling well ever :ince.” } Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. i Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ~The loan shark has the coin of van tage over people who borrow trouble. - A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR ) Y ' R l“\k‘ NS Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarette and Tobacco Habits. S Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION. Administered P f % by Bpeclalists for thirty f'earn. Correspondence confidential. 4 3 |8 8 B The Only Keeley Institute in Georgia. &8 esar 229 Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA. e~ TRy TR Tl American Cotton College ™l i madd on g Georgia. (For the education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton 83‘“1 Manufacturers, and a'l others, young or old, who are unable to classify end put the correct valuation on 18 Grades of Co!tos. Thirtly day scholarships in clgf sample rooms, or six weeks’ correspondence course under cxpert cotton men will complete you. Big demand for coiton graders and cotton buycrs. Session opens W Ist. Cerrespondence course year round. Writ: at once for furtherpa -ticu'ars, boo FLORENCE UNIYERSITY - WOMEN"iece | ; 3 NETECRITTEE® | ¥ Magnificent bulldings, costing SIOO,OOO. Elegant ‘ppumlrncnll." Refined and Christian Rkl 00l £ ha‘r:: Pianos and furniture all new Ideal location near the mountains, All college - g o' 5 courses. Conservatory unsurpassed. Teachers fror the best schools of Europe and e : America. Opens SeTPumbeu 18, 1908 For handscme catalog, address M. W HATTON and O. W. ARDER ON, Prendents, Florence, Al 08¢ 03 Scuthern Female College students will attend Florence University for 1908-1909. e R —EAne— [ i® i . The old time remedy for constipation. Violent 3 in its action. Containing a large percentage of e - ercury, it often produces griping and nausea. . 5 - Persistently used it causes ill health, decayed AL teeth and d)i’gestive troubles. Mfi s NUBIAN TEA brings relief and cures ten- : § dency towards chronic stomach troubles. Works | 'fii’r I quietily and effectively. Being a vegetable com- B N pound it follows nature’s methods with nature’s [ [¥2%Bg : remedies. Secures proper circulation of blood [ ISEsreeTE through the intestines and free secretion of bile, ILIVERND i both necessary to healthful condition of the di- rwcacnvowns s2O { gestive system. : o ) From hundreds of testimonials we quote: 7 :-53' = i “‘Millville, Fla.~— Please ship at once four dozen Nubian A o| § Tea Liquid, conceded to be the best liver medicine ever sold in p ‘m this section. D. L. Burgess.” All dealers sell it, k| 'e | 1 Manufactured by SPENCER MEDICINE CO. Chattancoga, Tenn. 7 "{7‘s."'4':{"‘ ; " . ] In order to celebrate our Eleventh Annual . TELEGRAPHY FREE! Bookkeepmg and Shorthand atOHal(;' Ratle! i -;u’lun;ofl};rulnr(:‘.m;l:’u'l'(el;;urnpl’kv vm,me‘é)fifl and Burines Gourse at half rate to ull'{tu lente who enroll before the 2'th of Reptemher. Our equipment s very “ulnli'uu'. ealthy Location, Artesian Water, ’ story collego bdlldi d the | D itory in South Georgin, Nine experttenchers, Board in private homes only §lO per month, R eied 00l oot bl ioing andthe asgpw Dorm CRV ely AND oM i T SCHUOL, Abbeville, Ga, TR TR RTR R R st IR R I T —"m"—n ) ° BT RR e e ey Pale Delicate Women and Girls The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Quinine ang Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children. 50c. Poverty is the one ]fixury the rich can't afford. John R. Dickey’s old reliable eye water cures sore eyes or granulated lids, Don’t hurt, feels good; get the genuine in red hox. “Flies must go,” is the latest edict of science. And after the mosquitoes and the flies and the fleas there will be the gnats, fears the Louisville Courier-Journal, which may possibly organize and overcome the human race when it is tired out from kill ing the larger insects. Hicks’ Capudine Cures Headache, Whether from Cold, Heat, Stomach, or Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous drugs. It's Lx?)éxm. Effects immediately. 10c., 25¢., and &lc., at drug stores Burglars having taking ways—but no bringing-back ones, - TETTERINE—A RELIABLE CURE, | TeTTERE is a sure, safe and speedy eure | for eczoma, tetter, skin and scalp diseases | and itching piles. Endorsed by physicians; ‘gralsed by thousands who have used it. | Fragrant, soothing, antiseptic. 60c. at | druggists or by mail from J. 'l'. BRUPTRINE, | Dept. A, Savanuah, Ga. ’ TO SAVE LABOR. Make cheese cloth slips for clock, pictures and fauncy articles; covel them when you are going to sweep . your rcom and see how much dusting - You are saved. The same set of slips { will last for years and save you many hours of labor.—Boston Post, e—— e ] SHE COULD NOT WALK | TFor Months—Buraing Humor on ' Ankles—Opiates Alone Brought 1 Sleep — Lezema Yielded to ' Cuticura. i “I had eczema for over two yvears. I had ‘ two plysicians, but they only gave me re- | lief for a short time and I cannot enun- | erate the ointments and lotions T used to | no purpose. My ankles were one mass of | soreg. 'l'he itching and burning were so in- | tense that I could not sleep. I could not | walk for nearly four months. One day my ‘~ husband said 1 had better try the Cuticura | Remedies. After using them three times, i I had the Lest night's rest in months un- | less 1 took an opiate. 1 used one set of | Cuticura soap, Ointment, and Pills, and my ankles healed in a short time. It is now a year since I used Cuticura, and there has been no return of the eczema, Mrs. David Brown. Locke, Ark., May 18 and July 13, 1007.” In the race for wealth but few men have a walk-over, : ; ~ SOFT CONNS BETWEEN THE TOES Are often more painful than the hard ones on top. ABBOTT'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT will cure either kind,as well as bunions,sore, callous, spots and indurations of the skin, “It cures to stay cured.”” 25c. at druggists or by mail. Tre ApsotT Co., Savannah, Ga, But for free speech some people wouldn't talk so freely, THE EXPLANATION., Freshman—"“Did your father cut your allowance on account of that Jark?"” Sophomore—*“No, indeed; probably on account of some business miscon duct of his in the past.'—Evening Sun, \ DIDN'T DELIVER THE GOODS. Mrs, ————: “I can remember the day when you begged me to say the word that would make you happy for life.” Mr, ———: “I know—but you sald the wrong word."—Life, BT PP R N A/ N A/ X/ NSNS DO N RSN WA ’ ! T R, o\ This sign is permanently attached to the front of the main building of the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. What Does This Sign Mean ? It means that public im("‘i)ection of the Laboratory and methods of doing business is honestly desired. Itmeans that there is nothing about the bus iness which is not “open and above board.” It means that a permanent invita tion is extended to anyone to come and verify any and all statements made in the advertisements of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Is it a purely vegetable compound made from roots and herbs — with out drugs ? Come and See. Do the women of America continu ally use as much of it as we are told ? Come and See. Was there ever such a person as Lydia K. Pinkham, and is there an Mrs. Pinkham now to whom sic?; woman ave asked to write ? Come and See. Is the vast private correspondence with sick women conducted by women only, and are the letters kept strictly confidential ? Come and See. Have they really got letters from over one million, one hundred thousand women correspondents ? Come and See. Have thv‘ proof that Tydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has ~cured thousands of these women ? Come and See, _ This advertisement is only for doubters. The great army of women who Inow from their own personal experience that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for female ills will still go on using and bein% ben efited by it; but the poor doubting, suffering woman must, for her own sake,be taught confidence,forshealso might just as well regain her health, | ? DEMOREST, GA. | Healthful mountain location. Regular Preparatory and College courses; swpecial courses in Business, Domestio Science and Music. Buperior advantages. | Rensonable prices. For catalogue and further infor | mation nddress HENRY C. NEWELL, Acting President. ———————————————————————————— | ‘ CURED ; Gives ! Quiock O Rellef. | (- Removes all swelling in Bto 20 | days ; effects a pfrmnnent cure ’ in3oto 60 days, Trialtreatinent ’ " given free, Nothingcan be fairer ! @\ . write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons, « | \A\-w\ ? Specialists, Box @ Allanta. G 1 e ——————————— ——— ' Take the Place of Calomel l Constipation sends fmimnnnu matter bouunding through the badyv., Dull headache, Sour Btomach, | Feted Breath, Blearod Eyos, Lows of Energy ?'l Ap | Yulit« ure the surest signs of he aflliction, oung's | Liver Pills postively cure constipation, They swaken | the -luguln{n liver to better action, cleanse the | bowels, strengthen the weakened parts, \nduce appe tite and aid digestion. They do not Salivate, no mat | ter what you ent, drink or do. Price?2s cents from your dealer or direct from J. M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS, GA. e ————————————————————————————— 9i) ; @ | Kegps tt!e breath, teeth, mouth and body entiseptically clean and free from une healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin. o> 3 . fecting and deodor- w | izing toiletrequisite (v of exceptional cx- BT o cellence and econ- pAXT'NE é omy. Invaluable TG AT S 177 , s MG e | for inflamed eyes, [ =" P throat and nasal and J P uterine catarrh. At | 11~ drug and toilet 1 g “ 2 stores, 50 cents, or Y o i by mail postpaid. S o ;l 17715 | iy TN \/ Large Trial Sample =25 WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY' BOOK BENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass, ——— R —— (At-33'08)