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DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGLASVILLE. GEORGIA.
Ybur Money
Back if you
say so
Tie Luzianne Guarantee:
If, after using the contents
of a can, you are not aaiiafiod
in every reaped, your gro
cer wiU refund your money.
Luzianne has nothing up its sleeve.
No, Ma’am. You yourself are going
to be the judge of whether this fine,
0I4 coffee has a right on your family
table or not. If you are not satisfied
that Luzianne goes farther and tastes
better than any other coffee at anywhere
near the price, your grocer will give
you back every penny you paid. Stop
grumbling about your present coffee.
Give Luzianne a chance to show you
just how good a coffee can be. Ask
for profit-sharing catalog.
‘coffee
The Reily—Taylor Company, A T ew Orleans
Princeton Hotel
ATLANTA. GA.
45-51 West Mitchell St withm Half Block of Tedminal Station
MODERN. C NVENIENT AND UP-TO-DATE
ALL ROOMS HAVE OT AND COLD RUNNING WATER, astern
heat, electric lip. ts and telephone. New eleetric elevator.
One hundred and f > tv rooms. One hundred with ppivate and con
necting baths. M > ern in its equipment and attractive Furnishings
No expense has ct spared to provide for the comfort and conven
ience of our patrons.
Europe n Plan. Rates,75c to $2.
H- R. Cannon, Prop
teaf
Long
hours, close and
tedious work are very apt
to result in Headaches or
other Pains. Don’t suffer.
DR. MILES’
ANTI “PAIN PIUS
will quickly drive your
Pain away, and
Dr. Miles* Nervine
will assist you by relieving
the Nerve Strain.
IF FIRST BOX, OR BOTTLE, FAILS
TO BENEFIT YOU, YOUR MONEY
WILL BE REFUNDED.
DIZZY SPELLS.
“My nerves became all
■vrorn out. I had bad head
aches and sovore dizzy
spells. I could not Bleep
and my appetite Was poor.
I began using Dr. Miles’
Antt-Paln Pills and they
always gave mo instant re
lief no matter what the
pain. Then I used Dr.
Miles’ Nervine regularly
and was' soon In perfect
health again.”
MRS. S. L. YOUNG,
324 Pittsburg St.,
Newcastle, Penn.
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK.
DON’T STAY BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED
“Dodson’s Liver Tone” Will Glean Your
Sluggish Urn Better Than Calomel
and Can Not Salivate.
Calomel makes you sick; you lose a
. . * • licksii
Way’s work. Calomel is quicksilver and
fit salivates} calomel injures your liver.
1 If you are bilious-, feel lazy, sluggish
fend all knocked put, if your bowels are
constipated and your head acheB or
fttom&ch is sour, just take a spoonful of
fiiarmless Dodson’s Liver Tone instead
Df using sickening, salivating calomel.
Dodsonls Liver Tone is real liver medi
cine. You’ll know it next morning be
cause you will wake up feeling fine,
your liver will be working, your head-
’ " and dizziness gone, your stomach
mm
Your druggist or dealer soils you
50 cent bottlo of Dodson’s Liver Ton*
under my personal -guarantee that it
will clean your sluggish liyer better Char
nasty calomel; it woh'-t^ihako you sick
and you can eat anything you want
without being salivated. Your druggist
guarantees that each Bpeonful will start
your liver, clean your bowels and
straighten you up by morning or .you
get your money back. Children gladly
take Dodson’s Liver Tone because it is
pleasant tasting and doesn’t gripe or
cramp or mako them sick.
T am selling millions of bottles of
Dodson’s Liver-Tone to people who baye
found that this pleasant, vegetable, liver
medicine takes the piac^^f dangerous.
lonoline is Beauty Aid,
Announces Specilist
Mildred Louise Talk of
Interest to Women
As health is a flr*t aid to beatty this
story, told by Mildred Louise, beaut,
pecialist, of Boston, Mass , is of un
usual interest.
I can recommend no better health
gi ver-than tonoline, ” said Mildred
Louise.
“I was for many months a victim of
stonfach troube and nervousness. 1
hud suffered terribly from pains that
followed eating. Ileadach also would
add to my worries. Poor digestion
finally brought on nervousness.
Relief came, however, when I took
the advice of several women who said.
Take tonoline.’
“Not long after I started the tono
line treatment, my patrons began to
remind me of the improvement in my
condition, And beauty, the improve-
ment was particularly noticeable in
my face.
What tonoline really did for me I
cannot say. 1 am so grateful that I
am very willing to recommend tono
line publicly." '
Tonoline is a purely vegetabl
preparation which goes to the seat of
common maladies—stomach and kid
ney trouble, catarrhal affections of
the mucous membranes, liyer ailments
and im.juritiesof the blood—and quick,
ly restores proper action. Tonoline is
being explained daily to many people
at J. L. Selman & Son’s.
Notice:—As tonoline is a wonderful
flesh builder it should not be taken by
anyone not wishing to increase his
weight ten poundB or more. Although
many reports are received from those
who have been benefited by tonoline
in severe cases of stomach trouble and
nervous dyspepsia.
-50c BOX FREE-
f REE TONOLINE COUPON £
... ERICAN PROPRIETORY CO^,'
Boston, Mas.
Send me by return mail a 50c box
of your celebrated flesh builder, j
enclose 10c to help pay postage and
packing.
Coughing Tires the Old
Hard winter coughs are very tiring to
elderly people. They mean loss of sleep,
and they deplete the strength, lower vi
tality, weaken and wear out the systemr
Foley’s Honey and Tar
stops coughs quickly. It is a standard
family medicine that contains no opi
ates, and is noted for its quick effect on
coughs, colds, croup, bronchial and
la grippe coughs, and the chronic coughs
of elderly people.
J. B. Williams, Trenton, Ga., over 73 3
Old says: I have used Foley’s Honey an<
old says: I have used Foley’s Honey and Tar
for years with the best and surest results."
J. L. SELMAN & SON
DON’T LET YOUR COUGH HANG
ON
A cough that racks andnyeakenes is
dangerous, it undermines your health
and thrives op neglect. Relieve it at
once with Dr. King’s New Discovery.
This soothing balsam remedy heals the
throat, loosens the phlegm, it. antisep
tic properties kill the germ and the
cold is quickly broken up. Children
and grown-ups alike find Dr. King’s
New Discovery pleasant to take as
well as effective. Have a bottle handy
in your medicine chest for grippe,
croup and all bronchial affections. At
druggists, 50c.
ENGRAVING
We Mar\ Wiihout
© A Country •
& Edward Evorctt Hale
Let us show you samples of
engraved cards, invitation, an
nouncements, stationary, etc,
Lowest prices possible on high
grade work.
Wedding Invitations $10 per
hundred and up, including double
Envelopes.
Cards, all kinds (1.60 per hun
dred and up.
Stationery to suit your taste
(Continued F.om L ist
as Ve {fame on deck, Vaughan
looked down from a hogshead, on
which he had mounted in desperation,
and said:
“For God's love, Is there anybody
who can make these wretches under
stand something? The men gave them
rum, and that did not qu|et them. I
knocked that big fellow down twice,
and that did not soothe him. And then
X talked Choctaw to all of them to
gether ; end I'll be hanged If they un
derstood that as well as they under
stood the English."
Nolan said he could speak Por
tuguese, and one or two fine-looking
Kroomea were dragged out, who, us it
had been found already, hud worked
for the Portuguese on the coast at
Fernando Po.
“Tell them they are free.” sold
Vaughnn; “and teU them that these
rascals are to be hanged ns soou as
we can get rope enough.”
Nolan explained it in such Portu
guese ns the Kroomen could under
stand, and they in turn to such of the
negroes ns could understund them.
Then there was such a yell of delight,
clinching of fists, leaping and dancing,
kissing of Nolan’s feet, and a generul
rush made to the hogshead by wny of
spontaneous worship of Vaughan ad
the deus ex machlna of the occasion.
“TeU them,” said Vaughan, well
pleased, “tlmt I will take them all to
Cape Palmas.”
This did not answer so well. Cape
Palmas was practically as far from
the homes of most of them as New Or
leans or IUo Janeiro was; that Is, they
would be eternally separated from
home there, And their Interpreters, as
we could understand, Instantly said,
“Ah, non Palmas,’’ and began to pro
pose Infinite other expedients In most
voluble language. Vaughan was rath
er disappointed at this result of Ills
liberality, and usked Nolan • eagerly
what they said. The drops stood on
poor Nolan's white forehead as he
hushed the men down, and said:
“He says, ‘Not Palmas.’ He says,
‘Take us home, take us to our coun
try, take us to our own house, take
us to our own plckuninnles and our
own women.’ He says lie has aa old
father aud mother, who will die, If
they do not see him. And this one
says he left Ills people all sick, and
paddled down to come and help them,
and that these devils caught him in
the bay Just in sight of home, and
that ho has never seen anybody from
home Blnce then. And this one says,”
choked out Nolan," “that he has not
heard a word from his home In six
months, while he lias been locked up
in nn infernal barracoon."
Vaughan always said he grew grny
himself wliile N'olan struggled through
tills interpretation. I, who (lid not un
derstand anything of the passion In
volved In it, snw that the very ele
ments were melting with fervent heat,
and that something was to pny some
where. Even the negroes themselves
stopped howling as they snw Nolan’s
agony, aud Vaughan’s almost equal
agony of sympathy. As quick as he
could get words, he said:
“Tell them yes, yes; tell them they
shall go to the Mountains of the Moon,
if thejglYflU. If I sail tile schooner
through the Great White Desert, they
shall go home!”
And after some fashion Nolan said
so. And then they all fell to kissing
him again and wanted to rub his nose
with theirs.
But he could not stand it long; and
getting Vaughnn to say he might go
back, he beckoned me down into our
boot. As we lay back In the stern
sheets and the men gave way, he said
to me; “Youngster, let that show yon
what It is to be without a family, with
out a home, and without a country.
And If you are ever tempted to say a
word or to do a thing that shall put
a bar between you and your family,
your home, and your coantry, pray
God in his mercy to take you that In
stant home to his own heaven. Stick
by your family, boy; forget you have
a self, while you do everything for
them. Think of your home, boy; write
and send, and talk about it Xjet It
be nearer and nearer to your thought
the farther you have to travel from It;
and rush to it, when you are free, as
that poor black slave Is doing now.
And for your country, boy,” and the
words rattled In his throat, “and for
that flag,” and he pointed to. the ship,
“never dreamy dream but of serving
her as she hide you, though the serv
k^arr^o^^nmgtwMhoUjian<Ui(>l]^
and people even, there Is the country
herself, your country, and that you
belong to her as you belong to your
own mother. Stand by her, boy, as
you would stand by your mother, If
those devils there had got hold of her
today 1”
I was frightened to death by his
calm, hard passion; but 1 blundered
out that I would, by all that was holy,
and that I had never thought of doing
anything else. He hardly seemed to
henr me; but he did, almost In a
whisper, sny: “Oh, If anybody hud
said so to me when I was Qf your age 1”
I think It was this half-conlldencc of
his, which I never ubused, for I never
told tills story till now, which after
ward made us great friends. He was
very kind to me. Often he sat up, or
evea got up, at nlglit to walk the deck
with me when It was my watch. He
explained to me a great deal of my
mathematics. He lent me books, nnd
helped me about my reading. He nev
er alluded so directly to hts story
again; bnt from one and another offi
cer I lmve learned, in thirty yenrs,
whnt X am telling. When we parted
from him In St. Thomas hurbor, at the
end of our cruise, I was more Borry
than I can tell. I was very glad to
meet him again in 1830; and Inter In
life, when X thought I had some In
fluence In Washington, I moved heav
en and earth to have lihn discharged.
But It was like getting a ghost out of
prison. They pretended there was no
such man, and never was such a man.
They will say so at the department
nowl Perhaps they do not know. It
will not be the first thing In the serv
ice of which the deportment appears
to know nothing!
There Is a story that Nolan met
Burr once on one of our vessels, when
a party of Americans came on board
In the Mediterranean. But this I be
lieve to be a lie; or rather, It Is a
myth, ben trovato, Involving a tre
mendous blowing-up with which he
sank Burr, asking him how he liked
to be “without a country.” But It Is
clear, from Burr's life, that nothing
of the sort could have hnppeued; and
X mention this only ns an Illustration
of the stories which get a-going where
there Is the least mystely at bottom.
So Philip Nolan had Ills wish ful
filled. Poor fellow, he repented of his
folly, nnd then, like n man, submitted
to the fate he had asked for. He nev
er Intentionally added to the difficulty
or delicacy of the charge of those who
had him In hold. Accidents would
happen; but they never happened from
Ills fault. Lleutenmit Traxtun told me
that when Texas was annexed, there
was a careful discussion among the
officers, whether they should get hold
of Nolau’s handsome set of maps, and
cut Texas oat of it, from the map
of the world and the map of Mexico.
The United "States had been cut out
when the atlas was bought for him.
But It was voted rightly enough, that
to do this would be virtually to reveal
to him what had happened, or, as
Harry Cole said, to make him think
Old Burr had succeeded. So It was
from no fault of Nolan’s that a great
botch happened at my own table, when,
for a short time, I was In command of
the George Washington corvette, on
the South American station. We w,ere
lying In the Iai Plata, and some of the
officers, who had been .on shore, and
had Just Joined again, were entertain
ing us with accounts of their misad
ventures In riding the half-wild horses
of Buenos Aires. Nolan was at table,
and was In an unusually bright and