Newspaper Page Text
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Vienna, W. Va.— “I feel that I owe
the last ten years (;f }ny ll{ige to I‘}ydia
A ] E. Pinkham’s Vege
%’J’fl ’iz; L ?i;'xlble Compound.
i e | Kleven years ago [
;{/{ {f,?f’}‘ Jwas a walking
1 %'v(% {shadow. Ihad been
8 iy | under the doctor’s
bg% Wy 4 carebutgotnorelief,
PRI y My husband per-
PO . 1 suaded me to try .
ki Wantd 7©. | Lydia E. Pinkham's
L ] Vegetable Com. |
R o roundanditworked |
f S like a charm. It re-.
@ lieved all my paing.’
and misery. I advise all suffering?
women to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.” - MKS. EMma
WHEATON, Vienna, W. {'a.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Végetable Com-
Kound, made from native roots and
erbs, contains no narcotics or harm.
ful dru%s. and to-day holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female (slisnasesof any similar medi.
cine in the conntry, andv thousands of
voluntary testimonials are on file in
the Pin{ham laboratory at L‘ym.
Mass.,, from women who have been
cured from almost every form of
female complaints, inflammation, ul
ceration,displacements, fibroid tumors,
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,
indigestion and nervous prostration.
Every such suffering woman owes it to
herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Ve%vtable Compound a trial.
If you wouls like special advice
about your case write a confiden- j
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at |
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful.
The dearest relatives are certainly
not the nearest—or the dearness soon
fades,
For COLDS and GRIP.
Hick's CAPUDINE s the best remedy -
relieves the aching and feverishness—cures
auid- e mmsdiual. oS Lo
60c., at drug stores. g o
The Twins.
Frank Work, the aged New York
millionaire, was talking to a reporter
about international marriages. |
“l can't understand,” he said, “why
& beautiful American heiress will
marry one of these fortune-hunting,
empty-headed foreigners when she
might have her pick of a hundred
strong, clean, industriops American
men,
“The gir! who makes an interna
. tlonal marriage,” said Mr. Work,
. trowning, “misses the real thing as
~ widely a 8 the Homer twins missed it.
~ *“The Homer twins, aged about
four, got their morning bath, and
then were dressed in clean white
gsuits and told to go out and play.
“At the end of an hour or 80,
their mother went to look for them,
She found them in the back garden,
it had rained the night before, and
a certain favorite hollow under an
elm tree was one soft-mess of ankle
deep mud. In this mud, on their ‘
stomachs, lay the twins, kicking out
their legs and brandishing their arms
with vigor,
“‘What on earth are you doing?
the mother cried.
“‘We're learin' to swim, mother,'
the twins answered.''—Washington
Stdr.
HIS CHANCE.
' He—Might { be go bold as to sit
beside you?
She—Most fellows are bolder.—
Evening Wisconsin,
ON FOOD
The Right Foundation of Mealth.
Proper food is the foundation of
health, People can eat improper |
food for a time until there is a sud
den collapse of the digestive organs,
then all kinds of trouble follow.
The proper way out of the difficul
ty is to shift to the pure, sclentific
food, Grape-Nuts, for it rebullds
from the foundation up. A New
Hampshire woman says:
“Last summer I was suddenly tak
en with indigestion and severe stom
ach trouble and could not eat food
.without great pain, my stomach was
80 sore I could hardly move about.
This kept up until I was so miserable
life was not worth living.
“Then a friend finally, after much
/argument, induced me to quit mny
former diet dnd try Grape-Nuts,
“Although I had but little faith 1
commenced to use it, and great was
my surprise to find that I could eat it
without the usual pain and distress
in my stomach,
“So I kept on using Grape-Nuts,
and soon a marked improvement was
shown, for my stomach was perform
ing its regular work in a normal way
without pain or distress.
“Very soon the yellow coating dis
appeared from my tongue, the dull,
beavy feeling in my head disappeared
and my mind felt light and clear; the
languid, tired feeling left, and alto
gether I felt as if I had been rebuilt.
Strength and weight came back rap
idly, and I went back to my work
with renewed ambition,
“To-day 1 am a new woman in
mind as well as body, and I owe it all
to this natural food, Grape-Nuts.”
“There's a Reason.”
Look in pkgs. for the famous little
book, “The Road to Wellville.”
Ever read theabove letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
_@re genuine, true, and full of human
interest.
LATE NEWS NOTES.
* General.
The financial budget of France, be
sides a progressive tax on incomes,
provides for a progressive tax on
dogs, ranging from 80 cents on the
watchdog to upward of $5 a head on
doge “de luxe” when more than fifty
are owned by the same person.
The wages of the one thousand cot
ton operatives at North Grosvenor
dale, Conn., are to bg increased ten
per cent August I¢, -As soon as the
new tariff bill gets t¢ working a gen
eral increase of the six thousand cot
ton operatives in the county is looked
for,
Because he was rich enough to buy
an automobile and then used it to
convey himself to and from work,
Otto Klessig, a journeyman plumber,
got into trouble with his unfon and
was arrested for trying to whip the
secretary of the local branch at Great
Fall, Mont, After the purchase of
the auto Klesig was fined $25 for us
ing it to ride to and from work, in
alleged violation of the union’s rules.
Washington,
A Chautaugua speaker wants the
government to employ Mr. Harriman
to run the railroads at a salary of
$1,000,000 a year.
To provide for a gurvey for some
great national highways, including
one to be known at the Roosevelt Na
tional’ roadway, Representative May
nary of Virginia introduced a bill ap
propriating $1,000,000 and authorizing
the president to appoint a national
roadway commission, The neasure
proposes to survey roadways to Port
land, Me.; Niagara Falls, Seattle, San
Francisco, San Diego, Austin and Mi
ami, Fla, from the national eapital,
They are to be named after Washing
ton, Lincoln, Monroe, Lee, Jetferson,
Roosevelt and Grant,
All future experiments wi'h the
Wright aeroplane, purchased by the
signal corps of the army, will be held
at Hyde Park, Md., nine miles from
Washington,
Admiral Sebree’s armored cruiser
squadron of the Pacific fleet, eight
veesels strong, will be absent from
the United States on its coming
crulse to Asiatic waters a little more
than five months, It will vigit Hono
lulu, Admiralty Islands, Manila, where
the yearly target practice will be
held, and Hong Kong, Woo Sung,
Kobe and Yokahama, Only two ves
sels, however, will go to the Chinese
and Japanese ports, except that the
whole squadron will assemble off Yok
ohama January 19, on which day it
will start home, touching at Honolula
and reaching San Francisco February
15.
Colonel Hugh 1.. Scott, the superin
tendent of the West Point Military
academy, has sent the war depart
ment a report on the hazing practices
at the academy, of which there re
cently appears to have been a recru
lescence, with Cadet Rolando Sutton,
a brother of former Lieutenant James
N. Sutton, whose death at the Naval
academy is now being investigated
Dby a court of inquiry, a victim.
But for the absence of the follow
ing democrats, Bartlett of Nevada,
Craig and Hobson gg: Alabama, Hitch.
M@ Nebraska, Russell of Texas,
aug ‘eisse of Wisconsin, the Taft-
Aldrich tariff bill would have been
re-committed when the vote was tak- ‘
en on Representative Payne's mo- |
tion. This would have meant the de.
feat of the hill, so far as the present
sesslon is concerned. If the demo
crats named had been paired the bill
would have been beaten. This is the
second time at this "session that the
democrats have lost the opportunity
of playing their trump card.
In order to obtain an estimate of
the amount of postal business trans
acted on rural routes, the posfiitoce
department ordered a count to be
kept on all rural routes of the num
ber of pieces of mail delivered and
collected, the number of money or
ders sold, the number of pieces of reg
istered mail handled, the value of
postage on all mail matter collected,
and the value of stamps, stamped en
velopes, postal cards and stamped
paper sold during the months of
March, April and May, and report
thereon to be submitted to the de
partment. Practically all of these re
ports have been received and. are be
ing compiled. Postmaster General
Hitchcock was advised by the fourth
assistant postmasted general that
such of the reports as have been ex
amined indicate a very large increase
over the last compilation made sever
al years ago, and that patrons of the
rural service thoroughly appreciate its
value and utility,
Secretary James Wilson has no rec
reations. Secretary McVeagh takes
the air in a stylish landeau; Secre
tary Meyer fs in the saddle at sun
up; Secretary Dickinson walks, rides
and drives; Postmaster General
Hitchcock prefers an automofiblle;
Secretary Knox golfs; Attorney "Gen
eral Wickersham puts in much of his
leisure time at the Chevy Chase club,
and Secretary Nagel's evenings are
spent at the Metropolitan club,
Aeronautics, wireless telegraphy
and wireless telephony are to play an
important part in the forthcoming
maneuvers of the militia and regulars
on the coast of Massachusetts. The
signal corps of the army will give
instruction in the use of aeroplanes
and Dballoons for scouting purposes
and in the manipulation of the wire.
less system of communication. The
oretical instruction will be given in
the use of the Wright aeroplane by
signal corps officers who are to be
bupils of Wilbur Wright,
President Taft has decided to in
clude Charleston, 8, (~ in his itiner
ary for the western and southern trip,
He will arrive in Charleston late in
the afternoon of November 5 and
spend the night there,
Mrs. Nicholas Longworth has be
come an enthusiast about aeronautics.
Her attendance upon the trials of
the Wrights' aeroplane was almost
constant, and now, it is said, she is
determined to make a flight herself,
not in the aeroplane—though it is
sald she even expressed her willing
ness for that—but in a balloon. A
Holland Forbes of New York has
promised to take her up. Mr. Long
worth is sald to-have accorded his
permission, Mr, Forbes having made
the promise contingent upon the hus
band’'s consent that she undergo the
hisk.
Reputations.
“The Autocrat,” remarked the Rec
ondite Person, ‘“made a remark the
import of which escaped me until the
other day. He said: ‘Many a man
has a reputation because of the rep
utation he expects to have some
day.”
“That’'s not a half bad remark,”
sugzested the Practical Person, “bu®
my son-—just out of college, yon
know, and in the habit of thinking
humpbacked thoughts, as it were—
said something only this morning that
appealed to me: ‘Some men, he
said, ‘get a reputation and keep it;
other men get a reputation and make
it keep them.'”—New York Times,
WHEN WOMEN VOTE,
She—Yes; I adore a big, broad
shouldered, brainy, handsome-looking
man,
He—Oh, darling! This is so sud
den —Columbia Jester.
Four ilear Case of Eczema Cured.
5639 Vernon St., St. Louis, Mo.
Mr. J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
Dear Sir:—My sister, Mrs. Elton, has
sent to you for your Tetterine for my
use. I have had eczema for four years,
and have tried everyt.hin?' possible to
cure it, without success until I tried Tet
terine. I even went to a noted specialist
and got no relief. Am glad to say that
your medicine has cured me after six
months’ trial. Miss A. B. King. -
Tetterine curfs Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm, Ground Itch, Itching Piles, In
fant’'s Sore Head, Pimples, Boils, Rough
Scaly Patches on the Face, Old Itching
Sores, Dandruff, Cankered Scalp, Buan
ions, Corns, Chilblains and every Zorm of
Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c; Tetterine
Boap 26c. Your d”“i}“" or by malil from
the manufacturer, he Shuptrine Co.,
Savannah, Ga.
There are two great classes of hard
men—the sort who have missed a lot
in life, and the others, those who
have missed nothing,
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for C’hfld;.
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ a t ottle
The most perfect flower, having no
scent, is like a man whose self-conceit
is a disguise to whatever is good in
him, X
~ A feeling of security comes with having
Painkiller (Perry Davis’j on hand as a gafe
guard against colic, cholera, cramps.
The very devil of a fellow abroad
is, nine times out of ten, angelic at
home, under a firm wife’s salutary
treatment. B
CHILD HAD SIXTY BOILS
And Suffered Annually With a Red
Scald-Like Humor on Her Head—
Troubles Cured by Cuticura. ;
“When my little Vivian was about six
months old her head broke out in boils.
She had about sixty in all and I used Cuti
cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment which
cured her entirely. Sometime later a
humor broke out behind her ears and
spread up on to her head until it was near
ly half covered. The humor looked like a
scald, very red with a sticky, clear’fluid
coming from it. This occurred every
spring. I always used Cuticura Soap and
Ointment which never failed to heal it up.
The last time it broke out it became so bad
that 1 was discouraged. But-I continued
the use of Cuticura Boap, Ointment and
Ra-olvent.l{:‘:il llu;l was well and has never
been troubled in the last two years. “Mrs. -
M. A. Schwerin, 674 Spring Wells Ave.,-
Detroit, Mich., Feb. 24, 1908.” ;
Potfer Drug &.'eghem. Corp., Sole Props.
of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. :
ee s —
The lonesome man left at home
for the season gets out frequenter
than ever, free from fears of late
returning, .
THIS LETTER IS WORTH READING.
“Gentlemen:—For five weeks I suffered
intensely from a bad case of Eczema, which
covered my chest, stomach, back and botfi_
arms. After trying three physicians an
one skin, s;zcmrfi-t, and b)P actual count
twenty-nine different ointments and lo
tions, 1 a(-ciden‘ml}ly learned of Hancock’s
Sulphur Compound and Ointment. As I
was willing to try anything' once, I(g\.‘ .
chased a_bottle of the Liquid and Oint
ment. The first application gave me ins
stant relief from that awful itching in
flamed surface of my skin. 1 persistently
used this remedy for one week and at the
end of that time I had hardly a trace of
the eruption on my person. 1f any reader
qQuestions this testimonial as'not being
bona-fide and absolutely unsolicited, an in- |
quiry addressed to the address below en
cllosjng postage, will convince any one be,,
youd question. WARREN C. GARES 3
*IOB So. Ohio Ave., Columbus, 0."”
Write Haxcock Liquin Surenur Co.,
Proprietors, Baltimore, Md., for Booklet, =
Sold by dmggmts. 4
The rfi?fi‘\;fid*}ifivs‘—flever tasted li
quor doesn't know the great moral
feeling that sways a fellow when he
swears off, S A
AN EASY WAY.
How to Cure Kidney Troubles Easily"
and Quickly, 5
It is needless to suffer the tortures 1
of an aching back, the misery of head- i
aches, rheumatic pains, urinary dis- |
orders, or risk the danger of diabetes
P or Bright's diseue‘j
0‘ The cure is easy.
IS Treat the cause—the
',\A kidneys -— with
& Doan's Kidney Pills,
fL {3‘/ John Corey, consta
o LN ble, Attica, N. Y.,
5 '_“.é_* ¥ says: “For months I
i hobbled around on
crutches owing to
lameness, weakness and stiffness
caused by disordered kidneys. I suf
fered awful pains and also had urin
ary derangement, After using
Doan’s Kidney Pills a short time I+
discarded the crutches and now I am
well and strong again, being com
pletely cured.”
Remember the name-—Doan's. Sold
by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Fos
ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
~ Note the ice man's kingship these
days: how he serenely drives up to
| your door at noon and hurls your
supposed share of coolness on the
\ sunny step, This s summer life that's
all.
R oo
ReL R S R e L RB S LXil S SR B
Becauge of those ugly, grizzly, gray haire. Vse '* LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. Pricq, SI.OO, retall.
MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT
; YOUR SERVICE FREE.
Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest
Medical Examination.
i If you are in doubt as to the cause
| of your disease mail us a postal re
| auesting a medicalexaminationblank,
’ which you will fill out and return to
us. Our doctors will carefully diag
l nose your casg, and if you can be
cured you will be told so; if you can
not be cured youn will be told so. You
are not obligated to us in any way, for
this advice is absolutely free; you are
at liberty to take cur advice or not as
you see fit. Send te-day for a medi
cal examination blank, fill out and
return to us as promptly as possible,
and our eminent doctors will diagnose
Your case thoroughly absolutely free.
Munyon’s, 53d and Jefferson Sts.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
WHERE TRADESMEN HUSTLE.
Young Housewife Finds Annoyances
on Moving to Country,
“Well, we've moved to the coun
try,” said the young housewife, “and
I have had my first taste of the pesti
ferous village tradespeople. We got
out of the city for rest and comfort,
but will have neither until these per
-Bsons, who have things to sell make
up their minds to let us run our own
business.
“They wouldn't even let us get the
furniture in the house. There was
I very early in the morning in an
_emptiy house Wwaiting for the vans to
‘“ come and unload and the bell began
|to I{\lng It kept ringing all that day
-and' for some days thereafter. Not
continuously, of course, but the
tradespeople came so close on each
other’s heels that there was very lit
tle let-up.
~ “First it was one milkman, then
_another milkman and soon thereafter
a third. They seemed to take it as
~a personal insult that I wouldn't give
an order forthwith. :
~ “Icemen came in droves. The gro
cers appeared with blank order books
all ready to hang on our kitchen
I door. They wanted to deliver goods
right off despite the fact that there
wasn't a thing in the house to put
‘them in.
. “Later in the day when the furni
ture had arrived and we got things
into some sort of order I wandered
into the village and made a few cas
ual purchases. Now in each store
_they seemed to take it for granted
that I had become their customer
for life.
- “Tll send arcund in the morning
for your order,” was what I heard in
every place, and when I said they
needn’t, that [ intended to do my own
ordering in person each day it made
no difference.
- “Around they all came the next day
smile on face and order book held
expectantly in hand. I sent them all
.away, orderless but still smiling, and |
later went to the stores as I intent. |
ed. In time, maybe, they will learn
that T'll buy when and where I pleas>. |
“The worst shock came on a Sun
aay ‘morning. We were all tired oul
~with the moving and getting settled
~and intended to sleep late; very late;
but before 7 there was a persistent
ringing of the ®bell. My husband
wrapped himself in a bathrobe and
‘Qescended. It was a boy who want
‘ed our order . for newspapers. He
went away quickly and my husband
kept saying things to himself all the
way back to bed. ‘
. “*You might just as well speak out |
loud,’ T told him, ‘and a few for me.'” |
~New York Sun. |
3 ~ Thing of the Past.
~ Leonaro O'Reilly, the vice president
of the Women’s Trade Union League,
| was pralsing this organization's work
in New York.
. “And it has a great future befo.r
it she said. “I have no doubt that
a century hence the members of the
league will regard the woman of to
‘day as we now regard the farmer's
wife of the early '4o's.
~ “A Maine deacon of the early '4o's |
was talking to the minister. He snif- l
fed and whined: ;
2'"'Oh, yes, Job suffered some, ! |
aln't denyin' that parson. But Job
never knowed what it was to have |
gls team run off and kill his wife ’
right in the midst of the harvest sea.
gon, with hired girls wantin’ two dol- ‘
lars and two and a half a week.'"
—Washington Star. |
The Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantie
Railroad
Will sell excursion tiekets at reduced fares
for the followi? oceasions:
» Mobile, Ala.,National Convention Knights
of mmb\és, A(\;g%:t $-6, 1909,
a., G.U. 0.0, F., August 10-
19, 1909, ' .
Flovilla, Ga., Indian Springs Holiness
Campmeeting, August 2-15, 1909,
Seattle, Wash., Alaska-Yukon Exposition,
June Ist-October 16th, 180 y, .
Seattle, Wash., I. 0. 0. F., September
20-25, 1909,
Spokane, Wash,, National Irrigation Con
greas, August 9-14, 1909.
~ In addition to the above, there are a
- number of occasions for which rates will be
llnlhorlud on ceriificate plan. Ticket
Agents will furnish fuil information.
W. H. LEARY,
General Passenger Agt., Atlanta, Ga.
A DISTINCTION.
Some one asked Max Nordau to de
fine the difference between genius and
insanity. “Well,” said the author of
“Degeneration.” “the lunatic is, at
.least, sure of his board and clothes.”
- Argonaut. -
French Opera Tea
French Opera Coffee
AMERICAN COFFEE COMPANY,
RO 2T L TS
" WIZARD OIL RS&
'—_“——_—_—___————__—’————d
MACON, GA., Announcement for 1909,
We are pleased to announce that our school will continue under the same successful management. Weo
place our students in well paying positions and exerciee just as much care in the placing of students
88 in the preparation. Unexcelled corps of trained instructors. By permission we refer to the clergy
of Macon. Starting %XGHT MEANS E;BING BlG&T. Send for catalogue Number 2.
| NOT EXCLUSIVE.
~ “Was it an exclusive party?”
“Not at all. Some of her relatives
wera there.”—Detroit Free Press.
Cured at Once
So say all whe take Dr, Biggers Huckleber
ry Cordial for Dysentery Diarrhoea and
Children Teething.'At Druggists 25¢ and 50c.
_Give the youngster a bit of vaca
tion and a fiver in his pocket and
the fountain of youth will stop at the
near-beer stand,
: _—
For HEADACHE—Hicks® CAPUDINR
» Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Ngrvous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you.
It’s liquid—pleasant to take—acts immedjs
ately. Try it, 10c., 25c, and 50c. at drug
stores.
Chase the slick thief to the end of
the alley and you will find a stupid
“drunk” asleep.
Rough on Rats, unbeatable exterminator,
Rough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder, 25c.
Rough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd, 25¢.
Rough on Pleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c.
Rough on Roaches, Pow'd, 15¢c.,Liq'd, 25¢.
Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c.
Rough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c.
E. 8. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N, J.
The true egoist is the man who is
jealous of someone he does not love,
but who may some day be the object
of his fascination.
REMEDY
FOR ALL FORMS OF
We solicit the most obstinate cases. We
sure to stay cured. Write for information.
P. O. Box 91, Atlanta, Ga.
o : CURED
By ; Givesr
Y = Quick
a Relief.
1 g Removes all swelling in Bto 20
i days; effects a permanent cure
~-N\ #A. in3oto 6o days. Trialtreatment
f \ [\ imgiven free. Nothingcan befairer
i > Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons
AN “@lsiSpeclalists, Box [ .Atlanta, Ge
—— e
B‘ REE Texas Guide. Owners’ names, grices, farms,
ranches, colonization tracts; buy from owners;
save commissions. Investors’ Gulde, Columbus, Tex.
et et - e . e e et e Sttt
: SACRIFICE SALE OF
AT
e °
Milltown, Georgia.
To mest our subscription on two new
railway enterprises coming to our town
with other factory enterprises, we are offer
ing 200 choice lots close in at the low price
of $35.00 each, payable $lO ocash, balance $}
monthly. This is the greatest sacrifice everx
offered in Real Estate, as our town has
nearly 2,000 people now, and with conviet
labor driven out of our town, a $50,00¢
Baptist College completed, two more rail.
ways headed this way, with several factory
enterprises, we cannot help doubling our
population in another'year.
This is a snap; write quiok, as they can
not last long. No delays. No waiting. You
get deed the day payments are completed.
South Georgia Land & Industrial Co.
Box 29, Milltown, Ga.
"HEELS &
'COUNTERS),
b i
l \lg\\ }" !
F R
| -
| * ’ Made of Steel
| %" ] For Miners, Quarrymen,
| Farmers and All Men
| Who Do Rough Work.
| Will cut down your
g M/ shoe bills. You can buy
K. shoes fitted with them
| M from your dealer, or any cob.
¢l bler can put them on. They will
s
"'l make your old shoes good as new.
b Will outlast three pairs of leather
heels, Let us send you booklet
that tells all about them, 0 /)
] UNITED SHOE /
MACHINERY CO.
BOSTON,
MASS. )
- SN\ AT
| SHAFTING, PULLEYS,BELTS
' LOMBARD IRON WORKS, AUGUSTA, GA.
| ———— Y UTAD, AUUUD IR, U
Brenau College-Conservatory
GAINESVILLE, GA.
| admng i & e S
park of 75 acres. Reg:lnr tio“?nm;m in:ll:d::g
| gf:::;‘i-':ézif:& inA t)::nBo::l:. I‘aautim'l illustra~
ted catalogue free. Address
. BRENAU,P. 0. Box 500, Gainesville, Ga.
" Callous th
bowels with harsh
cathartics, and you’ll need
physic always. Help them
gently, with candy
Cascarets, and you'll need them
rarely. Once learn the difference
and you'll never take a harsher
laxative than these. sy
Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at drug-stores, :
Each tablet ortrtho genuine is marked C CC,
.For a beautiful illustrated resort book
let, issued by Atlanta, Birmingham and
Atlantic Railroad, entitled' “Stpshm
and Mountain,” with up-to-date’ resort
map, send two cents in postage to W,
H. Leahy, Gen’l Passenger Agt., A. B.
& A. R. R, Atlanta, Ga.
T R e e ——————
> \WORLD WEARS
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s¥3oo SHOES $350/
4008 W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES are Better
— Value for the Price Than Ever Refore.
$5.00 The quality, workmanship and style cannot
Shoes § 16 excelled, A trial is all that is xleeded to
$3.00 convince anyone that W. 1.. Douglas shoes
and’ hold their af‘;npe. fit better and wear longer
482508 than other makes.
Bhoes W. L. Douglas repusation forthe best shoes
Boys' that can be produced for the price is world.
Bhoes wide. He stands hack of every pair and
sl.oof§ Fuarantees full value to the wearer.
to CAUTION. — See that W, L. Douglas name and
$3.00 the retail price is stamped on the bottom.
' TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
Shoes for Every Member of the Family,
Men, Boys, Women, Misses and Children,
Wherever you live, W. L. Douglas shoes are within
our reach, If your dealer cannot fit you, write for
me Order Catnfog. W.L.DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass,
———— e} DS VCALON, JLASS.
im
——NOTHINS LIKE IT FOR— |
THE TEETH Paxtine excels any dentifrice
in cleansing, whitening and
removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying
all germs of decay and disease which ordinary
tooth preparations cannot do.
THE MOUTH Paxtine used as a mouth.
TR wash disinfects the mouth
and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs
which collect in the mouth, causing sore lfirofl.
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness.
T“E EYES when inflamed, tired, ache
and burn, may be instantly
relieved and strengthened by Paxtine. ¢
c ATAHHH Paxtine will destroy the germs
5 that cause catarrh, heal the in
flammation and stop the discharge. It is a sure
remedy for uterine catarrh. ,
Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful e
ermicide,disinfectant and de;:iorizer. CNTs
Used i bathing t desroys odorsand RS
leaves the body antiseptically clean. [HSSAMMSEEN
FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES, 50, [‘g
OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. ~ t‘, ]
LARGE SAMPLE FREE! lnagal¥
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BOSTON, MASS.
ety
(AL.33709)