Newspaper Page Text
;M
No Man is Stronger
'’ - y
Than His Stomach &) £
A strong man is strong all over. No man can be &4
strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its %
consequent indigestion, or from some other disease " g
of the stomach and its associated organs, which im
pairs digestion and nutrition., For when the stomach . W
is weak or diseased there is a loss of the nutrition 'n‘
contained in food, which is the source of all physical ; \\\\\
strength. When a man ‘‘ doesn’t feel just right,” 2 \ )
when he doesn’t sleep well, has en uncomfortable
feeling in the stomach after eating, is languid, nervous, irritable and despond.
eat, he is losing the nutrition necded to make strength,
Such a man should use Dr. Plerce’s Golden Medical
Discovery, It cures diseases of the stomach and other
organs of digestion and nutrition. It enriches the blood,
invigorat=s the liver, strengthens the kidneys, nourishes )
the nerves, and so GIVES HEALTH AAND STRENGTH TO
THE WHOLE BODY.
You can’t afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute ror this ‘non
alcoholic medicine or KNOWN COMPOSITION, not even though the urgent dealer,
may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wrapper.
A CERTAIN CURE FOR SORE,WEAK & INFLAMED EYES, |.
9 i
L
B
MAKES THE USE OF DRUGS UNNECESSARY. Price, 25 Cents. Druggists:
O ————————————ee e a—
COLT DISTEMPER
Can be handled very oasily. Ihe sick are cured, and all others in
o same stable, no matter how “‘exposed,” kept from having the
\SR "R disease, by using SPOHN'S quf;m msn&nu CURE, Give
. \ s;‘ Py om the tongue or In feed. Acts on the blood and expels germs
v P : ¥ of all forma of distemper. Best remedy ever known sos mares in
3 TN ) foal. One bottle guatanteed (0 cure one case, 50c and §1 a bottle;
2 GTI ;_.ylr [| ) ssand glodozen, of druggistsand hiarness dealers, or sentexpress
/ | i, - Bty l F-ld by manufacturers, Cut shows how to poultice throats. Our
4 e J {l’ free Booklet gives everything. Local agents wanted. Largest
’ o ! selling horso remedy In existence—twelve years.
SPOMHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U, 8. A,
m_————,,
Those who figure in advance esti
mate that Greater New York's popu
lation in 1950 will be close to 18,
000,000,
Very Seovere.
Samuel Gompers was talking In
the smokeroom of the Baltic about
A recent newspaper attack on a rich
corporation.
“It was a cruel attack,” Mr. Gom
pers chuckled. “It was as cruel as
the Jonesville Clarion’s paragraph
about old Deacon Hiram Ludlow.
“This paragraph headed the Clar
fon’s obituary column. It said:
#‘Deacon Hiram Ludlow of Fris
ble township, aged eighty-two, passed
peacefully away on Thursday last
from single blessedness to matrimon
fal bliss, after @ short but severe at
tack of Maria Higgins, a blooming
widow of thirty-seven summers.’ "—
Washington Star,
THE
- BEST
o
For Women—L?'dia E.Pink
’
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Noah, Ky, — “Iwas gassing through
the Change of Life and suffered from
headaches, nervous
- Erostration, and
Rt emorrhages.
. T “Lydia E. Pink
el W ham's Vegetable
S R Compoundmademe
i % well and stronfi(, 80
LY L that Ican doall my
S 8 8 housework, and at
:‘,@r tend to the store
R and Fost—omve, and
oo q.;gfik i 1 feel much f'ounger
R ;§§ ’ WAI than I really am.
e S¥N] “Lydia E. Pink.
DAIR'S Vefetuble Compoundis the most
successful remedy for all kinds of
" female troubles, and I feel that I can
pever praise it enmll(gh. " e MRS, LlzzlE
“ HorrAnD, Noah, Ky.
The Changeof Life is themosteritical
period 'of & woman’s existence, and
neglect of health at this time invites
disease and pain.
» -Womeneverywhereshouldremember
th!dtlthem isno other remedy known to
medicine that will sosuccessfullycarry
women thmufih this tryin% {wdod as
Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com.
Kmmd, made from native roots and
erbs.
For 80 years it has been ocuring
women from the worst forms of female
ills —inflammation, ulceration, dis
glwements fibroid tumors, irregulari
es, perio«fuc Qains, backache, and
nervous prostration.
If you would like special advice
about gom‘ case write a confiden
tlal letter to Mrs. Pinkbham, at
Lynn, Mass, Her advice is free,
and aiways helpful.
“I have suffered with ;])iles for thirty
six years, Oune year ago last April I be
m taking Cascarets for constlii;ution. In
course of a week I noticed the Files
began to pear and at the end of six
weeks they did not trouble me at all.
Cascarets have done wonders for me. I
am entirely cured and feel like a new
man."”” George Kryder, Napoleon, O.
Pleasant, Palatable, Pote~t, Taste Good.)
Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe.
10c, 2S¢, Soc. Never sold in bulk, T'he gen
uine tablet stamped CCC, Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. 20
4 This Trade-mark
7 .
‘ & Eliminates All
5 S ’
Qs Uncertainty
:. % in the purchase of
5 ; {‘.aint materials,
s N tis an absolute
P guarantee of pur
’ fi‘\'; ity and quality,
3% ~)"\' For your own
protection, sce
L that it is on the side of
every keg of white lead
. D you buy.
( NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
1802 Trinity Bullding, New York
I ulleud“ 9 [ w___
o " LHOMpSON'SLye water
\ ’WQI “\\\\ “\\\\\'l \
| *‘ P 9. d
231 gan® v>, OF,
SLICKERS 4%
wear well W
and theY keep you ‘r AR
dry while you ‘are ) | © |
wearing them ‘
sz3oo |
EVERYWHERE
GUARNTEED WATERIROOF”
CATALOG FREE S
AJToweR Co soston usA
THE PECUNIARY STANDARD.
“Do you assume to compare your
self with the masters of literary ex
pression?”
“Sure,” answered the man with the
typewriter. “I was paid more for my
latest story than John Milton got for
'Paradise Lost.' "—Washington Star,
PAINT DURABILITY.
The first thought inpaintingshould,
of course, be durabjlity—and dura
bility means simply pure paint prop
erly applied. Pure paint is pure
white lead and linseed ofl (with or
without tinting materfal).
~ Some years agothe paint-buyer was
likely to get adulterated or counter
feit white lead if he was nc: familiar
with brands. To-day he may buy
with perfect safety if he only makes
sure that the Dutch Boy Painter
trademark is on the packages of
- white lead that he buys. This trade
mark was adopted by National Lead
Company to distinguish the pure
white lead made by them from the
worthless adulterated and fake goods.
It {8 a guarantee as valuable to the
house-owner as the education of a
paint expert could be,
It is better to have too little con
fidence in yourself that to have too
much in other people.
Perry Davis' Painkiiler for seventy years
has been curing diarrhcea, dysentery and
bowel complaints. (et the genuine.
It is“undoubtedly good luck to pick
up a pin, if it happens to be a diamont
pin. ) |
Rough on Rats, unbeatable exterminator,
Rough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder, 250,
Rough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq’d, ¢,
Rough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c.
Rough on Roaches, Pow’d, 15¢., Liq’d, 25c.
Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c.
Rough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25a,
. 8. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J.
Shake hands with the honest man,
but it won't cramp the fingers, He
iis a rare genius,
Do your feet ever f i
sore at nisht? Rub tehler:x“;(}"th‘c:‘yli:ag
Hamlins Wizard Oil. They’ll lbe glad in
k the morning, and so will you. %
| The sunniness of the heart full of
‘hcllet in hunan nature is more radiant
than day.
| M. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
| teething, softens thegums, reduces inflamma
i Hon,allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ a t ottle
| The vengeance of man is such
a farce-comedy that only clowns may
try it seriously.
A g R P
For HEADACHE-Hioks' CAPUBINR
| o ¥hether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
{ Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relteve you.
| I¥'s liquid—~pleasant to take—acts l%
| ately. Try ft, 10c., 25¢, and 50c. st
' storea.
; The Lazy Bug Again.
| It must be a mistake to conclude
| that the “lazy bug” flourishes alone
[ln the South. The symptoms describ
| ed are not unknown in the North and
|in the Bast and West, too. Ther:
| must be many parts of the Sou:
| where the ‘hook worm fiß '“f",{
{ found at all. The men who \mit
| that Galveston wall were not so '-
' flicted and it surely is mot much x;
| evidence in Kentucky, the home o
[ Representative Ollie James, where
| there is always something doing tro:;
| the discussion and mn\lm\:;: e
| politics to the preservation of
| bacco crop.—lndianapolis Star.
| —'—"——"—T—"—;o s
{ The number of pl)‘flMl w
| to the holy places of Islam ('floec:
' and Medina) this season is estima
| ed at about 170,000.
} ' Beven Drams ¢f Radium.
I A value of £4 a milligram (equiva
| dent to £114,000 an ounce) has been
' placed on radium by a contract just
| entered into between the British me
{ talliferous mines and Lord Iveagh
| and Sir Ernest Cassel for the supply
of 7% grams (rather more than a
| quarter of an ounce) of pure radium
! bromide. This very large order for
| radium will be supplied from the
| above named company’'s mine mnear
! Grampound road in Cornwall. In the
' short history of radium there has
i never hitherto been known any great
; er order than a gram. The first re-
I colored order on a large scale will
therefore be supplied from the Brit
! ish source from which several of thas
smaller orders have already been sup
s plied. Messrs, Bueliler & Co., of Bruns
wick, will produce the radium from
i the Cornish pitchblende under the
~ superintendence of Professor Giesel,
i their chlef chemist. The 7% grams
of radium referred to are to be pre
sented by Lord Iveagh and Sir Ernest
' Cassel to the radium institute, to the
information of which they have al
’ ready contributed very large funds.
' The radium institute, which will be
under the surgical direction of Sir
Frederick Treves, is expected to be
ready to receive patients suffering
from cancer about the end of the
present year.—London Times.
| Chase for President,
A circular, “strictly private,” 3zign
ed by Senator Pomeroy, and in favor
of Mr. Chase for President, has been
detected and published. It will be
more dangerous in its recoil than its
projectile. That is, it will damage
Chase more than Lincoln. The effect
on the two men themselves will not
be serious. Both of them desire the
position, which is not surprising; it
certainly is not in the President, who
would be gratified with an enim‘ae
ment. Were 1 to advise Chase, it
would be not to aspire to the posi®
~ tion, especlally not as a competitor
with the man who has given him his
confldence, and with whom he has
acted in the administration of the
government at a most eventful period.
The President well understands
Chase's wish, and is somewhat hurt
that he should press ferward under
the circumstances. Chase tries ’to
have it thcught that he is indifferent
- and scarcely cognizant of what Is
doing in his behalf, but no one of
his partisans is so well posted as
Chase himself.—Gideon Welles, in the
Atlantic, A L
The new Chinese government ar
senal at Canton now turns out rifles
and quick-firing guns, according to
the latest patterns, which are a.lgzoqt
as good as those imported- from for
‘elgn countries with regard to make
and finish. Fopl
MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT
| YOUR SERVICE FREE. ' .A Lia
Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest
Medical Examination.
If you are in doubt as to the cause
of your disease mail us a postal re
questing a medical examinationblank,
which you will fill out and return to
us. Our doctors will carefully diag
nose your case, and if you can be
cured you will be told se; if you can
not be cured you 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 our advice or not as
you see fit. Send to-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. £
The students of physiognomy have
not yet analyzed the reason why some
men grimace like apes. !
Dr. Pierfie’s Pelleés, sma.lll, :nsu:lu;a*!d.
g candy, ulate and in
:?';ytet:tct):n:c}:s l(i'ver )anfiowels. Do :gi
gripe.
Many a fellow doesn’'t seem to
realize the difference between taking
a brace and taking a bracer. ‘
,For COLDS and GRIP.
s SATIRUTS ob, bk, ety
finieeaed s prmel S )
00, atdrug stores. : 0, ..“
The man who “won’t listen to rea
son’ is generally thinking the same
thing of us. %
eM. | L
; RAISED FROM SICK BED
After All Hope Had Vanished. ;
Mrs. J. H. Bennett, 59 Fountain
St., Gardiner, Me., says: “My back
B used to trouble me
0 so severely that at
& last I had to give up.
i I took to my bed and
NS stayed there four
W Rt months, suffering in
“ o tense pain, dizziness,
PPy, beadache and inflam
r{v #ON mation of the blad
‘/& ‘ ‘l| der. Though with
“{l out hope, 1 began
? using Doan’s Kidney
Pills, and in three months was com
pletely cured. The trouble has never
returned.”
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
INNOCENT.
“Clifford,” asked the teacher, “who
wrote the Junius letters?” ;
“I—l don't know, ma'am,” answer
ed the terrified little boy. *“I didn't.”
—Chicago Tribune. |
You Lg__o__k_P remaTUrelyOltT
. T TS
Secauge of those ugly, arizzly, gray hairs. VUse '* LA CREOLE " HAIR RESTORER. Prico. SI.OO, retail.
s :
‘ it m
3 & %
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A, so(e T ek oy
A %5 I X N
G o R BT My 0 0 S 0 ARSI €i LR ROl iy i
ff""?’% Phopmeesids S s e 5" afi"fi? :
E" ’ ’Ysfl‘fl,};w A fwm‘%‘?‘ifi“ S ;
ORI ew e R LR ey % R
v Bee T ate .| | ,ii,w,i,f@&r ST A "‘éf"‘zé\*?f"‘ P :
Re G A
. B i “;1»«.;,"“‘“"?5% :
P 2Ty X 7 R ¥ -3 B ON I RN R s
: A ¥ . R TR i AR
bg Tt g BT e U vl B oyt W’s
» ? * £ BT % 5%, A = \fifl;’,‘{' 8 rd ! ?
Aéé 7 % % A fi‘fi, ; /;{ “/ + v ‘):: .‘ L , % Y . fi}?«: ~.,.,-'{b’ '
Sl ias ¢ TOGNY Tol R Pet “ ¥
i"‘ ‘ o :9" % ‘?, 2 i i ‘ P
503 TR eN4 p. /4 ‘ Juigath-
T NG W S —
AR, IR e :
THE WHITE STEAMER WHICH MADE A SUCCESSFUL PUBLIC DEMONSTRATION OF
KEROSENE AS FUEL ON THE RECENT 2630-MILE GLIDDEN TOUR.
The most interesting announce
ment ever made in connection with
the automobile industry was un
doubtedly that made a month or two
ago to the effect that the new models
of the White Steam Cars could be run
on kerosene, or coal oil, instead of
gasoline. [Everyone at once recog
nized that the use of the new fuel
would add materially to the advan
tages which the White already pos
sessed over other types of cars.
There were some people, however,
‘who were sceptical as to whether or
not the new fuel could be used with
complete success and, therefore, the
makers of the White Car, the White
Company, of Cleveland, Ohio, deter
mined to make a public demonstra
tion of the new fuel in the 1909 Glid
den Tour. .
From the standpoint of the public,
no test more satisfactory could have
been selected. First of all, the dis
tance covered on the Glidden Tour,
from Detroit to Denver and thence to
Kansas City, was 265‘0 miles. This
was certainly more than sufficient to
bring out any weaknesses, if such had
existed. Still more important was
the fact that the car‘was at all times
while on the road under the supervi
sion of observers, named by those
‘who entered other contesting cars.
Therefore, it would have been impos
sible for the driver of the White to
have even tightened a bolt without
the fact being noted and a penalty in
flicted. At night the cars were
guarded by Pinkerton detectives and
-equld not be approached by any one.
m
- The Lazy Bug Again.
It must be a mistake to conclude
that the “lazy bug” flourishes alone
in the South. The symptoms deserib
ed are not unknown in the North and
in the East and West, too. There
must be many parts of the South
where the hook worm is scarcely
found at all. The men who built
that Galveston wall were not so af
flicted and it surely is not much in
evidence in Kentucky, the ®iome of
Representative Ollie James, where
there is always something doing from
the discussion and manufacture of
politics to the preservation of the to
bacco crop—lndianapolis Star.
According to the report for 1907
08 of the London County Council Edu
cation Committee there were in the
schools 882,834 elementary scholars
—a decrease on the year of 7,759.
HAD SEVERE WEEPING ECZEMA.
Face and Neck Were Raw—Terrible
Itching, Inflammation and Sore
| ness—All Treatments Failed—
Cuticura a Great Success.
l “Eczema began over the top of my ear.
It cracked and then began to spread. I
had three different doctors and tried sev
i eral things, but they did me no good. At
last one side of my face and my neck were
raw. The water ran out of it so that I
had to wear medicated cotton, and it was
8o inflamed and sore that I had to put a
piece of cloth over my pillow to keep the
water from it, and it would stain the cloth
a soft of yellow. The ecczema itched so
that it seemed as though I could tear my
face all to pieces. Then I began to use the
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and it was
not more than three months before it was
all healed up. Miss Ann Pearsons, North
field, Vt., Dec. 19, 1907.”
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp!, Sole Props.
of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass.
High living doesn’t fit one for the
higher life.
.
SHAFTING,PULLEYS.BELTSi
LOMBARD IRON WORKS, AUGUSTA, GA.
\/m \.
B (I @UL - N
. REMEDY - :
‘Write for free booklet on trastmeans of S
sanhrv. ln%v Southern th-%eimt?“’l‘.fi\g ‘
UTHERN CK FOOD 00., ATLANTA, GA. |
————————————————————— |
NTY DIFFERENT FOUR COLORED VIEWS of ’
New York, Coney Island and Atlaantic City with |
ket stereoscope, Beautiful novelty. send 18e¢or
Bmps The Royal Mfg.<Dis.Co..Baltimore. Md. |
The complete success of the new
fuel while on this 2650-mile public
test and the advantages gained
through ite use were well described
In the following dispatch which the
correspondent of the New York Sun
sent to his paper at the conclusion of
the tour: :
“A feature of the tour which was
watched with special interest was
that the White Steamer used kero
sene, or ‘coal oil,” as fuel instead of
gasoline. The new fuel worked
splendidly throughout the 2650-mile
journey, and all ciaims made in its
behalf were fully proven. First of
all, as regards cheapness, the White
driver secured kerosene all along the
route from 6 cents to 10 cents cheap
er per gallon than was paid for gaso
lene. Secondly, the new fuel was
handled withcut any precauticns, and
it was not unusual to see kerosene
being poured into the fuel sank while
the crew of the car and an interested
crowd stood by with ‘lighted cigars
and cigarettes. At the finish of the
tour, the White was the only car per
mitted by the authorities to enter
Convention Hall, where the technical
examination took place, without
draining its fuel tank. Thirdly, the
new fuel proved to be absolutely
without smoke or smell. Fourthly,
kerosene could be purchased at what
ever part of the route was most con
venient, and not once during the trip
through the ten States of the Middle
West was there found a grocery store
where kerosene was not readily and
cheaply obtainable. Finally, the
MADE FROM OUR
Is deliclous and cooling. It is economical because one
pound will make 250 cups. Try a pound. In sealed cans,
60 cents,
Is always the same—ALWAYS GOOD,
AMERICAN COFFEE COMPANY,
OF NEW ORLEANS, Ltd,
_—-—.——__—___—._——___—_———_-——_—._——
N B /GO RY A -'
\ R\ L B
/ s O - . o2>
/s Bi i e
e B 'flf Cbb d O . \@; .
{=2 (abbade and Onions S
E _," by adding Potash to the commercial fertilizer you use on y
— these crops. It produces sound, solid heads and bulbs with \
P 4 much improved flavor, and matures the crop well ahead of frost 2%/
'A,/’ '.:c 4 7 5
I" Potash Pays : é
W oot Pt tiiige e cont Fox = N
% ) / ?mtma. Two Ibs, ogl’g.uh to ovofyllw bs. of Py i
./ | egte d::r l:;:remt o omh‘tiota per cent. /.“.*
LN i soll iore mpnarey SIS
£ 1! on request—Free. ' ), i ) \
R /‘! fj) GERMAN KALI WORKS, Atfanta, Ba., 1224 Candler Bidg. / l{/’ O )
\../ 7 Chicago, Monaduock Block New York, 93 Nassan Bt. | ; #é&r&”;' {
s g S fi@: oy /i
b Wif/\—? \ N LS \i(’ 7 ¢vn/’7://
= = e b 4
WWWMW
s NEWNAN, GEORGIA.
Established 21 years. The Oldest. Most Reliable and Best Telegraph School
in the South. Tuition reasonable; board cheap: town healthful and pleasant. We teach
TELEGRAPHY, TYPEWRITING & RAILROAD AGENCY. A school for YOUNG MEN
and LADIES. Open year round. Students can enroll at any time. Most modern equip
ment: instruction thorough and practical. Only 4 to 6 months required to qualify for
service. Diplomas awarded. Graduates GUARANTEED good positions. They begin on
#45 to #65 per monih; rapid promoiion: steady employment. Constant demand for
Telegraphers. Telegraphy is the only trade or profession NOT overcrowded. Write
today for our 1909 handsomely illustrated 64-page Catalog. It contains full partic
ulars about Telegraphy and our School and wlfi fully convinee you that the 8. 8. T. is
the BEST. Itis FREE and will be mailed promptly on request. You ean’t afford to miss
it. It will encourage and inspire you.
SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY, Newnan, Ga,
!
Free lunch is often food for thought. | (At.36°09)
amount.- of fuel used on the trip
showed that kerosene is at least
fifteen per cent. more efficient, gallon
for gallon, than gasoline. The car in
other respects made a most creditable
showing, and there was the usual rive
alry among the observers to be as
signed to the White =0 that they
could ride with the maximum of com=-
fort. The only adjustments or re
pairs charged against the car during
the long trip were tightening a lubri
cator pipe and wiring a damaged mud
guard. These penalties were not in
flicted untjl more than 2000 miles
had been completed with an absolute
ly perfect score.”
A particularly interesting feature
of the new White Steamer is that
either kerosene or gasoline may be
used as fuel. The necessary adjust
ments so that thefuelmay be changed
from kerosene to gasoline, or vice
versa, may be made in a couple of
minutes; but so completely successful
has kerosene proven to be, that it is
not believed that any purchasers will
care to use gasoline.
The White Company report that
the demands for their new steam cars
—both the S2OOO-model and the
S4OOO-model—exceed their most san
guine expectations. It is evident that
the combination of steam—the pow
er which everyone understands and
has confldence in—with kerosene—
the fuel which everyone has on hand
and can handle without any danger
—is thoroughly appreciated by
up-to-date purchasers of automo
biles. )