Newspaper Page Text
^yrup*ffig ©ixirtfo S
0* Grata
Cleanse Uj, llw Dispels IJisaeU 5 the System Lolas ananeact Effect
ua
aches due To Lortsujpau trul ion;
Acts Laxative. naturally, act :ts J as
a - JCM.1
Best forMen.Wt omon d Old. an
ren % -young ge\ its Beneficial an ____ Effects
Always buy the Genuine vvKicVi
has me jml name of the Com
pany CALIFORNIA
Jig- Strup Co.
tyw hom it is manufactured, printed on the
front of every LEADING packctoe. DRUGGISTS.
SOLD BY ALL bottle.
one size o nly, regular price 50tper
Expert are now able to d Languish
the writing of any particular type
umiting machine, jus't as they recog¬
nize the penmanship of an individual.
Surely that’s discouraging, observes
the New York Herald, to the writers
of anonymous letters.
SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
With Eczema •Her Limb Peeled aud
Foot Was Raw—Thought Amputa¬
tion Necessary—Believes Her
Life Saved by Cuticura.
“I have been treated by doctors for
twenty-live years for a bad ease of eczema
on my leg. They- did their best, but
failed to cure it. .My doctor had advised
me to have my leg cut off. At this time
my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot
was like a piece of raw flesh, and 1 had to
walk on crutches. 1 bought a set of Cuti
cura Remedies. After the first two treat¬
ments the swelling went down, and in two
months my leg was cured and the new skin
came on. The doctor was surprised and
said that he would use Cuticura for his
own patients. 1 have now been cured over
seven years, and but for the Cuticura Rem¬
edies 1 might have lost my life. Airs. J. 13.
Renaud, 277 Alentana St., Aiontreal, Que.,
Feb. 20, 1907.”
_
The Seven Stars Hotel at Village
Green, Pa., has been a public house
for 145 years. It was the headquar¬
ters of General Cornwallis in 1777.
To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up
the System
Take the Old Standard Grove's Taste¬
less Chill Tonic. Yo>i know what you
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simply and Qui¬
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, tho
most effectual form. For grown people
and children. 50c.
The Methodists have found a. name
for the American divorce habit, de¬
clares the Haverhill Gazette, They
call it “consecutive polygamy” and.
in view or the containaious performance,
that isn’t half bad.
REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIN*.
Abbott’s east Indian cubs paint removes
corns, root and all, without cutting or burn¬
ing and leaves no soreness. It cures soft
corns between the toes, bunions or sore,
callous spots. It cures all quick and per¬
manent. Get it at your druggist or send
85c. to Thb Abbott Co., Savannah, Ga.
Those expecting to be bothered
with the boll weevil sooner or later
Bhould do a little 'toward getting
ready for it, by raising turkeys. They
are good weevil-catchers.
Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease.
A powder. It re-ts the feet. Cures Uorns.
Bunions,Swollen, Sore, Hot,Callous, Aenmg
Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s
Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At
*11 Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac¬
cept Address no substitute. Olmsted, Sample Leftoy, niailed^FRHic. N. \.
Allen S.
If culling the flock has been de¬
layed. do more than make a resolu¬
tion now to do it—do the culling.
Breed up this year more, not down.
HAD ECZEMA 15 YEARS.
Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksville,
Gn., writes, under date of April 23, 1907: “I
•ullered r5 yea-s with tormenting eczema; noth¬
had the best doctors to prescribe; but
ing did me any good until I got tbttef.ine. thankful.”
It cured me. I am so
Thousands of others can testify to similar
cures. Tetteeine is sold by druggists or
sent Dept. by mail for 50c. by J. T. Shuptkine,
A, Savannah, Ga.
Did you ever use ducks to clean
potatoes of bugs? Try it at the first
opportunity, and you’ll feel more
kindly towards them.
John R. Dickey’s old reliable eye water
cures sore eyes or granulated lids, Don’t
hurt, feels good; got the genuine ia red box.
The early chicks mi: most of the
troubles caused by red bugs and too
hot sunshine during their critical
period.
Hicks' C’apudine Cures Headache,
Whether from Cold, Heat, Stomach, or
Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous
urugs. 10c., It’s Liquid. Effects immediately.
25c., and 50c., at drug stores
It is a mean woman, insists the
Philadelphia Inquirer, who ' says that
The Merry Widow hats which a.re the
rage just now are entailer than the
panamas men sported a few years
ago. But the men admitted they
were ridiculous and soon gave them
np, which is more than the women
will do.
SHIPS OF CONCRETE.
Miracles of the Prophet’s Floating Ax
Revived.
Italy, according to present indica¬
tions, will soon give us seagoing
steamships with hulls made of con¬
crete.
The first occasion on which concrete
was used as a shipbuilding material
was in 1855, when a small boat made
of it was exhibited at the Paris Ex¬
hibition by a Frenchman named Lam*
bot. This vessel, which is still afloat,
was constructed of wire netting cov¬
ered with cement.
It was not until 1S9G that the mat¬
ter was taken tip again, and then an
Italian named Gabelliui. constructed
several concrete vessels of about 120
tons, some of which are still in use
ou the Italian rivers.
Some years later the Italian govern¬
ment gave instructions for an experi¬
mental boat to be built of concrete.
This boat, of 120 tons, was built by
Gabelliui, and was subjected to severe
tests in the dockyard at Spezia. A
much larger iron vessel with a sharp
ram was directed against it, but no
impression was produced on or dam¬
age done to the concrete ship. The
result was that several similar ves¬
sels were built for the Italian govern¬
ment.
The general method of construction
is as follows: The frames and longi¬
tudinal beams are made of concrete
reinforced with round bars of iron, and
the skin consists of a single or dou¬
ble layer of concrete stiffened with
wire netting, and made perfectly
smooth and water-tight by an internal
coat of pure cement.
The boats cost almost nothing for
maintenance, are fireproof, and cost
about half as much as iron vessels
of the same capacity.
An Italian engineer, Signor d’Adda,
has also submitted proposals to the
Italian government for the use of con
crete armor on warships, and a serb-;
of trials to test the resisting power
of reinforced concrete is about to be
made.—London Express.
Fireproof Cities.
The day may come when there will
be no wooden tenements, no wooden
trimmed buildings of any deesription
in our cities. That will be the millen
nium of precautionary construction,
It is possible, but undoubtedly so re
mote that it can be now viewed chiefly
as an ideal condition. The process of
replacement of the old with the new
is cerlain to be tediously slow, Fire
itself will hasten it more rapidly than
the sense ot' safety, inspired by the
numerous demonstrations that wood
en construction, though perhaps
cheapest at first, is eventually the
most costly. It lias been suggested
that when the fires have licked up all
the wooden structures in the cities
there will be so little wood obtainable
owing to the rapid devastation of our
forests, that steel and concrete will
be cheaper for building materials. In
the light of such fires as that which
destroyed one-third of Chelsea, Mass.,
this condition would not be ultimately
disastrous. Those who regard fires as
unnecessary waste, as calamities that
may be prevented by common sense,
precaution, and timely provision of
checks and safeguards, sometimes
contemplate the passing of the forests
without dismay.—Washington Star.
Kept but Not Used.
George Kayes, clerk at the Fair
mont, \ who is- English but is ambitious
to outgrow it ., was discussing the en
durance con os a >
court. “Of course, I know you got .
your jury system from England ” he
said, and so I suppose I u D
criticise it. But tbis is a country of
progress and you ought to try to make
some improvements.
“Suggest one, interposed Attorney
General Lauck, who was passing.
“Well, you might allow more leeway
in the matter of having opinions,
Now, if I were a talesman I should
not consider it a bar to jury service
if I had an opinion. I could lay it
aside while the trial was on.”
“And what would you do with the
opinion while it was laid aside?”
“I would keep it.”—San Francisco
Chronicle.
Work and Nationality.
“I can get an English coachman a
place twice as quickly as a German
or a Yankee coachman,” said an em¬
ployment agent. “Each country, I
find, is supposed to turn out one kind
of workman of peculiar excellence.
Thus England’s specialty is the stable¬
man.
“France’s specialty is the chauffeur.
The cook, too, is a specialty of France.
Scotland is noted for its engineers,
and in the field of sport for its golf
coaches. The Swiss are considered
to be the best watchmakers. It is
never any trouble to get a Swiss
watchmaker a job. The Swedes are
the best sailors. Germans are at a
premium as brewery hands. Italians
are in demand an plaster workers, a
trade wherein they wonderfully ex¬
cel.”—Chicago Inter-Ocean.
The total income of the London bar
is put at £780,000 a year. As there are
2500 practicing members, the average
income is £315.
Tlia (Englishman's ardent admira¬
tion for tlia Jap is not appreciated
by the 'Ganuk, notes the Sacramento
Union. The mistress of the seas
made a rail-stake when she took the
Mikado into her political family.
FITS,St.Vitus’Dance:N cured by Dr. Kliue’s iryows Diseases Great Nerve per¬
manently Restorer, trial bottle and treatise free.
fci Phila., Pa.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St..
Many a man gets the upper hand
by dealing it to himself from the bot¬
tom of the deck.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
toothing,softens thegums.roduc.esintlamma- wind colic, *25eabottle
liou, allays pain,cures
The Oldest g-Congt-essman.
“The oldest living ex-member of
the Congress of the United States
is the 1-ion. James C. -McGrow, cf
Klngswood, in my State,’’ said Rep¬
resentative Sturgess, of the Second
West Virginia District, at the Ren¬
nert.
“Mr, Mc-Grew is now ninety-eight
years of age. He is in full posses
eion of his mental faculties arid would
| Je j n good physical condition -but
f or injuries sustained in an accident
in Florida some little while ago. He
was thrown out of a carriage, the
horses of which had bolted, and both
legs were broken. The surgical work,
it is claimed, was faulty and Mr. Mc
Grew has since been forced to walk
with a cane. Otherwise for a man
so closely verging upon a century he
is in good shape.”—Baltimore Ameri¬
can.
FACTS
; FOR SICK
! WOMEN
i
j |
o igS :o A
| ft
j 88$ u
j
j
j
j
At.
|
SmTvI! i m.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM
ISTo other medicine has been so
successful in relieving the suffering
of women or received so many gen¬
uine testimonials as has Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
In every community you will find
women who have been restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg¬
. j etable Compound. has either Almost been every bene
one you meet
| flted by it, or has friends who have,
i j In the Pinkham Laboratory at
! Lynn,Mass.,anywomananydaymay
| I see the files hundred containing thousand over one letters mil
I lion one
from women seeking health, which they and
j here are the letters in
openly state over their own signa
they were cured by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Pjukhara \ egetable Compound,
Lydja R ’ s Vegetable
Compound has saved many women
fr f S £ pj^am’s* onprations
Lydia Vegetable
Compound is made from roots and
herbs, ’ without drugs, and is whole
gome and i )arm less.
The reason why Lydia E. Pink
Yarn’s Vegetable Compound is in- so
successful is because it contains
g re dients which act directly upon
tPe f em inine organism, restoring it
|- 0 a healthy normal condition,
Women who are suffering from
those distressing ills peculiar to their j
sex should not lose sight of these 1
facts or doubt the ability of Lydia
E. Pinkharn’s Vegetable Compound
to restore their health.
Says the Baltimore American: A
sound mind in a sound body ia still
the college ideal, and there never will
be a return to the days of cadaverous
scholarships, when the student went
through the dull round of study with¬
out appeal to his physical nature, a.t
the age when the demands of the
latter are closely linked to health and
success in the battle of life.
n Dr. Diggers Huckleberry Cordial
BOWEL Never fails to relieve at once. It la the favorite baby medicine of
TROUBLES the best nurees and family doctors. Mothers everywhere stick to it,
and urge their friends to frive it to Children for Colic. Dysontery.
Crampfi, Diarrhoea, Flnx, Foul-Stomach and all Stomach and Bowel
CHILDREN Ailment?. You can depend on it. Don't worry, but take Dr. Bikers
Huckleberry HAI/riWANGEIl Cordial. 25 cents at drug stores, or by mail. Circulars free.
TEETHING TAYLOK DRUG CO., Atlanta, Ga
CURES ST0M4CH-ACHE IN TEN MINUTES
Malaria Makes Pale Sickly Children
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 and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form.--* For adults and children. 50c.
to work oil'sonic cheap coffee he had long had on hand,—
told his customers times were hard (!) and ISctsa advice pound
was enough to puy for coffee. They followed his
and got. a tasteless, dyspepsia-breeding article strength. requiring Before a
1 double quantity to make any showing going for elsewhere to buy
A he realized it Ills customers were last-twicc-as-long Fi’ZIANNB
delicious, double-strength, price—liocts—is really only ha I fas
( OFFEll, whose ex pea
si ve as the loots kind.
v-P'-WB LUZIAKNE COFFEE
jj? ( .
KOI.» F.VK35 \ W Hi E«I E
Penrr.anship of Author.
Among present day novelists the
prize for good handwriting should
be awarded to Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle. His manuscripts are a p?r*
feet, picture of clear, precise callig
raphy, as easy to road as type.
Another good p.-mnan is Max Dem¬
berton, and no one can -sec even as
much as his signature without de-tec;.
ing the artist in every curve. Ho
is trying for the eyes, for ho errs
on the side of minuteness. One of
the most businesslike "fists” is that
of Frank T. Pullen. Pullen told the
present, writer that the very act of
writing was a real joy to him and
that he was never happier than when
covering page after page with his
sloping, 1 schoolmasterlike characters,
Ilal Came writes a very plain , out .
not particularly distinguished hand,
Unlike F T Bullen, ’ he declares the
• . ho
writing him, yet . ne\u
act of bores
dictates. He can, however, write any
where, even like Mark Twain, in bed.
Stanley Weyrnan and J. M. Barrio
are both good penmen, -but Coulson
Kernahan often causes brain rack
ing on account of the smallness of
1 his writing.—From Tit-Bits.
No Use Bothering.
An engineer from Sunderland was
spending * a few days in London with
a friend, , and ... after a . busy morning • „
sight-seeing -the Londoner chose a
large restaurant fo-r luncheon, think¬
ing it would be a novel experience
for the man from the north.
The visitor appeared to enjoy his
luncheon, but kept looking in the di
rection of -the dcor.
“What are you watching?” asked his
friend, rather annoyed.
“Well,” was the quiet reply, “A‘»
keepin’ an eye on ma topcoat. »»
“Oh, don’t bother about that,” said
the other. "You dont see me watch
i T1 6 rr mine ”
“No.” observed the guileless eng!
neer, “thee has no call to. It s ten
minutes sin thine
phia Ledger.
THIS
LaefMarpiecc
STAMPED
HL' O N CLO TH
Xfi t Ca iG INCHES
tm. FREE 1
Hcnd dealer’s nauip and »oa> Iroin pound
carton o1“S40-Mnle-Team” Uoru* with 4c
stnnsps and we will mall illustrated book¬
let, ttivinir many uses for "Borax In the
Home, Farm and Dairy,” also this ince de¬
sign, 15 by 1« Indies, ou cloth ready lor
working. FREE. Address,
FACIFUC COAST llUKAJ. CO., New York.
(A127-08.)
I h* II
I
FOR MEN
A shoe that is too big may not pinch, but it is a bad fit just the same.
What you want is a shoe that matches the shape of your foot at the
place where your weight rests,— not too large or too small, but exactly
right. SKREEMERS are shoes lik_ that, and M/UK BY.
the style is there, too. Look for the label. felted
* FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. M3 j
ElWCSfmtttSL
u.s.a.
nubia* CURES LIVER TROUBLES
MILO BUT EFFECTIVE IN ITS ACTION
TRV A BOTTLE STIMULATES THE LIVER TO NORMAL ACTION
«8K YOUH DEALER FOR IT
Dropsy CURED
Gives
Quiok
if» Relief.
x Removes all swelling ia Stoat
M"' z days; effects a permanent ctn«
in 30 to 60 days. Trialtreatmant
S| given free. Nothingcan befalrw
Specialists, Write Dr. H. Box H. Green’s Atlanta, Sob% w
b
A Boston pastor says that, the only
way a. man could justify the use of
tobacco would be to cor. ent to lot
bis wife ire Ms use with him. But
suppose bis better half should in-slot
on select i the brand? asJca ths
Sprit gfield Union
Hicks’ ('apndine Cures Women’s
«"•> Monthly Headache. Pains, It’s Backache. Liquid. ElTccte Nervousness,
intme
duitely. result". I resenbed and by physicmns with best
10c., 25c., one., at drug stolen.
The paper trust sees the ax descend.
ing, but it is nimble enough to side
step lightning, observes the Atlanta
Constitution,
KCZIOMA CUBED.
T R Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: M *
suffered agooy with a severe case of «<*•
ma. Tried six different rcmediea and wm
in despair, when a neighbor tola me using to try |t
shuplrino’s tettkjune. After
worth of >our trite rink and soap 1 am
completely cured. I cannot say too rnuob
in its praise.’ i ettkiune at druggists 0*
|>y m(U1 5I!( , SoiM , 2 5e. J. T. HHtimrai,
Dept, A, Savannah, Ga.
It is far better to feed and water
ducks and chickens separately. Gees*
fall in the same class ns ducks, a*
far as bding undesirable when*
chickens are fed or watered.
25c. WILL CUKE TOUR CORNS
If you invest it in a bottle of abbott’s *aki
Indian conn paint. It removes hard or soft
corns T bunions or soro, callous spots on th*
foetj val . ts or ^durations of the skin. N»
no pain, after no cutting, soreness; no quick, “eating” safe, of the sure, fi °*h
druggist or by mail from Thic Abbott Co.,
Savannah, Ga.
The Kaiser believes in thus old
.j'age, "Early to bed,” and wo® bo
side any of his sons who may com*
in later than 10 o’clock.
Take the Place of Calomel
| constipation ’beared sends n oiRononB maltor houn
i .
Hluggisu v«“y action, clean#® 0
the liver to better
bow Is, strengthen the weakened parts, 8alivat<j,no Induce >><ppn* luat.
| titB and nri digestion. drink They do. do not Price 26 cents fro®
i ter what you eat, or
• our dealer or direct from
J-M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS. GA.
*
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un¬
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, snap and tooth preparation*
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin¬
fecting and deodor- __
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex¬ 17. 1] v
cellence and econ¬
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes, y.
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At > Jj
drug and toilet sr
a m
stores, SO cents, or I :
by mail postpaid. pi
Large Trial Sample
WITH “HIALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK BENT Hitt
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.