The Fort Valley leader. (Fort Valley, Houston County, Ga.) 1???-19??, August 21, 1908, Image 7
Is Pe-ru-na Useful for Catarrh? Should a list of the ingredients of Pe runa be submitted to any medical ex pert, of whatever school or nationality, be would be obliged to admit without reserve .that the medicinal herbs com¬ posing Peruna are of two kinds. First, standard and well-tried catarrh reme¬ dies. Second, well-known and gener¬ ally acknowledged tonic romodios. That in one or the other of these uses they have stood tho tost of many years’ experience by physicians of different schools. There can bo no dispute about this, whatever. Peruna is composed of some of the most efficacious and uni versally used herbal remedies for ca¬ tarrhal diseases, and for such conditions of the human system as require a tonic. Each one of the principal ingredients of Peruna has a reputation of its own in tho cure of some phase of catarrh or as a tonic medicine. The fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis¬ ease which is very prevalent. Many thousand people know they have chronic catarrh. They have visited doc¬ tors over and over again, and boen told that their case is one of chronic catarrh. Jt may be of the nose, throat, lungs, stomach or some other internal organ. There Is no doubt as to the nature of the disease. The only trouble is the remedy. This doctor has tried to cure them, That doctor has tried to pre scribe for them. No other household remedy so uni¬ versally advertised carries upon the label the principal active constituents, showing that Peruna invites the full inspection of the critics. CLOSE AS HE COULD GO. Church—Did you ever try any of these “close to nature' ‘methods? Gotham—Well, I’ve used a porous plaster.—Yonkers Statesman. Hicks’ Capudine Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, overworked, or what not. It refreshes the brain and nerves. It’s Liquid and pleasant to take. 10c., 25c., and 50c., at drug stores. Cats to Socre Away Squirrels. Three Easterners came out to the (Coast a year and a half ago looking for a location, and the result of the venture was explained Thursday night by H. J. Macomber, who arrived at the St. Francis and registered from Paicines Rancho. They have just completed a $25,000 data a mile long and nearly fofrty feet high ,and the water for it is brought through seven miles of ditches from the Tres Pinos and the San Benito rivers. But squirrels are the best and the menace, and a man with a gun has to guard the dam to keep squirrels from (puncturing it and starting a ibreak. At the dam a colony of cats has been placed to ''base squirrels, and one of the men nas devised a great number of little crosses with ribbons from the arms, and a cross Is set at each squirrel hole, so that as the breeze blows the ribbons flutter and when the squf?rel comes up he is frightened awAy.—San Francisco Chronicle. SCIENTIFIC. “Do you really think there are peo¬ ple on Mars?” "Well, to be candid,” replied the professor, “I find that articles making such claims are more popular with the magazines.”—Philadelphia Ledg< er. SELF DELUSION Many People Deceived by Coffee. We like to defend our indulgences and habits even though we may be convinced of their actual harmful¬ ness. A man can convince himself that whisky is good for him on a cold morning, of beer on a hot summer day—when he wants the whisky or beer. It's the same with coffee. Thou¬ sands of people suffer headache and nervousness year after year but try to persuade themselves the cause Is not coffee—because they like coffee. “While yet a child I commenced using coffee and continued it,’’.writes a Wis. man, “until I v/as a regular coffee fieud. I drank It every morn¬ ing and in consequence had a blinding headache nearly every afternoon. “My folks thought it was coffee that ailed me, but I liked it and would not admit It was the cause of m trouble, so I stuck to coffee and the headaches stuck to me. “Finally, the folks stopped buying coffee and brought home some Pos tum. They made it right (directions on pkg.) and told me to see what difference it would make with my head, and during that first week on Postum my old affliction did not bother me once. From that day to this we have used nothing but Postum In place of coffee—headaches are a thing of the past and the whole fam¬ ily is in fine health.” “Postum looks good, smells good, tastes good, is good, and does good to the whole body.” ' “There’s a Rea¬ son. ” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They interest. are genuine, tnie, and full of human w3m& M <rPi ■•va I r lA |) rA JX' » Pi ARTISTIC AND DELICIOUS. . Tli a hostess who likes variety should try this Sauce for vanilla Ice cream instead of the popular hot chocolate dressing: Prepare half a dozen oranges by cutting them In half and removing the cores. Sea that every bit of skin is removed. Boil for seven or eight minutes a half pound of sugar and a quarter of a cup of hot water. Do not stir or it will sugar. I Dip the oranges into the hot sirup, let them stay a minute or two, then put on a platter and pour the re¬ maining sirup over them to cool. If you have a ring mold freeze the vanilla ice cream in it, pile up the hollow with the oranges and pour the sirup over them both. If not, serve the ice cream on a round plat¬ ter, and heap up the oranges around the base. It is better to select the medium¬ sized or small oranges, or they can be divided into sections, cut across the whole orange with the heart re¬ moved. Some of the juice is apt to be lost by this latter method.—In¬ dianapolis News. STUFFED TOMATO SALAD. “A stuffed tomato salad is one of my new recipes,” writes Fannie Mer¬ ritt Farmer, the great cooking au¬ thority, in her monthly page in the Woman’s Home Companion, Peel six small tomatoes, cut a dice from the stem end of each, remove the soft inside, sprinkle the Insides with salt, and let stand, inverted, thirty min¬ utes. Mash half a ten-cent cream cheese, add six chopped pimolas, one tablespoonful of finely chopped pars¬ ley, one tabiespoonful of tomato pulp, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of dry inustard and enough French dressing to moisten. Fill the tomato cases with the mixture, and serve on lettuce leaves with mayonnaise dressing, which may be successully made if one will but follow directions. Mix one teaspoonful of mustard, one teaspoon¬ ful of salt, one teaspoonful of, pow¬ dered sugar and a few grains of cay¬ enne. Add the yolks of two eggs and stir until thoroughly blended; then add one-half teaspoonful of vinegar. Add olive oil gradually at first, drop by drop, and stir constantly. As the mixture thickens, thin with vinegar or lemon juice. Add oil and vinegar or lemon juice alternately, stirring or beating constantly, until two table¬ spoonfuls, each of vinegar and lemon juice and one and one-half cupfuls of olive oil have been used. If the oil is added too rapidly the dressing will have a curdled appearance. A smooth consistency may be restored by taking the yolk of another egg and adding the curdled mixture slowly to it. Olive oil for the making of mayon¬ naise should always be thoroughly chilled. The utensil used In the mak¬ ing of mayonnaise may be a silver fork, wire whisk, small wooden spoon or egg beater.” ITOUSE= lOLD i z' y \ V' V ilNTS j After touching poison try to wash the parts exposed in alcohol and avoid anything greasy. If salt is thrown over the carpet before sweeping it will clean the car¬ pet and make it easier to sweep. If hot bread or cake Is cut with a heated knife blade, instead of a cold one, clamminess will be prevented. Neither bread nor cake should be put into boxes until cold if you do not wish it to get soggy from the moist¬ ure. A pinch of salt will make the white of an e o at 5 at beat quicker, and a pinch of borax in cooked starch will make the cloches stiffer and whiter. To clean finger marks from paint wipe the spots first with a cloth dipped in warm water, then with a cloth dipped in whiting, and wipe again with a clean damp cloth. To clean silver trimmings cover the surface will well dried and finely powdered magnesia, and let it lie for a couple of hours. Afterward rub in the powder and brush off with a hard brush. In ironing the pleat at the back of a shirt waist, on which the tiny but¬ tons are sewed, try laying it on flan¬ nel or a Turkish towel as you do em¬ broidery. The buttons sink in and the material is ironed. ? • - Frequently after .cleaning cloth with benzine a ring is left around the stain. To remove this moisten the place again and apply a lajer of gyp¬ sum, extending it a little beyond the ring, and allow it to remain until dry. i/T ( §5pEEN r COFFEE>| • ■ green people A) (1 buyuiq you are dusf-ladenod behind the qraen times coffee yoa are and probably roasting ^ v : K . it yourself simply because it #iA5i<y aromatic X wq and fresh. If you are U*m£*re sanitarily you are usmq lc\ l Luz/anhe Cornu? fresh cleaned.* If perfectly air-ticht roosted sold and Everywhere equally in its | can P if iVlHtRElLY-TAYlOlF,MIWCIMIAK5. LUZIANNE"T THt WISE r Mtfl ^ S A y COMPANY ^ U Declaring that he had “an irresisti¬ ble desire to lull somebody,’’ a New York merchant committed suicide. He picked, the right victim, says the Omaha Bee. HAIt ECZEMA 15 TEARS. Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Gn., writes, under date of April 23, 1907: suffered iSyea-s with tormenting prescribe; had ihe best, doctors to but ing did me any good until I got tettf.bine. It cured me. I am so Thousands of others can testify by to cures. Tettkuine is sold druggists sent by mail for 50c. by J. T. Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. It was a 1 mean man, declares the Springfield Union, who observed that the duplicate sessions of the Federa¬ tion of Women's Clubs in Boston woujd give the women twice as many chances to all talk at once. BABY CRIED AND SCRATCHED AJI the Time—Was Covered with Tor¬ turing Eczema—Doctor Said Sores Would Last for Years—Per¬ fect Cure by Cuticura. U My baby niece was- suffering from that terrible torture, eczemg,, It was all over her body, but the worst' was on her face and hands. She cried and Jscratfched all the time and could not sleep night or day from the scratching. I had her under the doc¬ tor’s care for a year and a half and he seemed to do her no good. I took her to the best doctor in the city and he said that she would have the sores until she was six years old. But if I had depended on the doctor my baby would, hatie lost her mind and died from the want of,aid. But I used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and she was cured in three-months. Alice L. 'Dowell, 4769 $0, Easton Ave., St. Louis, Mo., May 2 and 1907.” FROM THE MAJAISTRATB. Mrs. Jimmy Beau—“My good man, do you ever reflect that our days are numbered?” ’ , Kinhardly Waddle—“Yes, mum; sometimes I get thirty an’ costs an’ sometimes a3 high as sixty.”—New York Press. A CORN CUBE THAT CUBES. Abbott’s east Indian corn paint Is a derful remedy for hard or soft oorns, bun ions, sore, callous spots on the feet, warts and Indurations of the skin. It is applied with a brush and euros without cutting, burning or soreness. 25c. atyour druggists or by mail from The Abbott Go., nak, Ga. PROFIT AT BOTH ENDS. "I accept all first contributions.” declared the editor. “It’s a paying scheme.” "Why so?" “The author buys many copies of the magazine and nearly always frames the check we send.”—Kan¬ sas City JournaL THE TIME TEST. That is What Proves True Merit. Doan’s Kidney Pills bring ths quickest of relief from backache and kidney troubles. Ib that relief lasting? Let Mrg. James M. Long, of 113 N. Au gusta St., Staunton, Va., tell you. On January 31st, 1003, Mrs. Long wrote: ‘‘Doan’s Kidney Pills have cured me" (of pain in the back. urinary troubles, bearing down sen¬ sations, etc.) On June 20th, 1907, four and one-half years later, she said: “I haven’t had kidney trouble since. I repeat my testimony. a Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. BETTER. The bridegroom (on the return from the honeymoon): Hello! What’s this? Ail the bills for your trous¬ seau! Why, I thought your father paid these. Bride: It is customary, dear. But he thought you would rather do it than give him the humiliation of bor¬ rowing the money from you.—Life. To Drive Out Malaria and Build Uj the System Take the Old Standard Grove's TA8TX- I LESS CHILL Tonic. Yoa know what voa are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and children. 50a Black gauze flowered in pink was the material for a French hat with draped crown and wide brim over which the flowered gauze was drawn ismoothly. TELEGRAPHY FREE!. and Business Connie at half rate to all students who Three Write handsome, illustrated two-etory catalog college free. AddressH. buildings and S. the Xor PLUMBERS IN CHILE. Many Cities Putting In Water Sewage Systaina. Gccd plumbers are now said to to Chile when they die, says Weekly. The national has just directed that a largo of the cities put la complete and- sewerage systems. This a greatly Increased demand for all plumbers’ supplies. Heretofore the demand for this class of goods has. been limited to Valparaiso .and, ago, while from new op it.will be much more general, and the demaud should soon be doubled. • So far the United States has been supplying only a comparatively small part of this business, and while Am¬ erican-made goods are well received, the trade has net been properly ex¬ ploited. The United States supplied in 1906 only about 3 per cent, of the load pipe imported, which In all amounted to $24,577, U. S. currency; i while of the bath supplies we furn ished about 51 per cent, of the $21,180 worth. The other accessories of tho plumbing business largely came from Europe, England taking the lead In such articles as brass tubing, valves, faucets, etc. Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains, from Belching, Sour Stomach, It's and Heartburn, whatever cause. Liquid. Effects 25c., immediately. and 50c., Doctors drug prescribe it. 10c., at stores. With respect to educated insects, there is the spelling bee, suggests the Salt Lake Tribune. © / Food | Products Peerless Dried Beef Unlike the ordinary dried beef—that sold in bulk— Libby’s Peerless Dried Bee! comes in a sealed glass jar in which It. is packed the moment it is sliced into those delicious thin wafers. None of the rich natural flavor or goodness escapes or dries out. It reaches you | fresh and with all the nutri¬ j ment retained. j Libby’s Peerless Dried Beef is only one of a Great number of high-grade, ready to serve, pure food products that are prepared in Libby’s Great White Kitchen. Just try a package of any of these, such as Ox Tongue, Vienna Sausage, Pickles, Olives, etc., and see how delightfully dif sky ferent they are nw from others j you haveeaten. | Libby, McNeill & ! Libby* Chicago | m r NUBIAS CURES Constipation, Biliousness and Indigestion TRY A BOTTLE Does Not GHpe. Pleasant to Take. - Ask your dealer for it. American Cotton College SWIedgeville, For Georgia. the education of Farmer*, Clerk*, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton Buyer*, Manufacturer*, and all others, young or old, wjha are unable to classify and put the correct valuation on 18 Grades of Colton.* Thirty day scholarship* id our sample rooms, or six weeks’ correspondence course under expert cotton men will complete you. Big demand for cotton graders and cotton buyer*. Sesrion opens Sept. 1st. Correspondence course year round. Write at once for further pa -ticulars, r I RE [$ r i I _____ Svlfivlra '.»L?rwiB I Oiristian LI ! ? t h ri j M.sntlicwit build mg*, couin; $100,000 Elegant appointment.. Refined and college Sp ^ omc - Ri.ino, and furniture all new Ideal location near the mountain.. All eouraer Conaervwory uniurpatKd Teachers from the bent school, of w Europe HATTON and v T? k. - 11-11 ~ ^ Wt America^ Op«M ND£ f September to ?; I8 I008 For handsome catalog, addrew IA J0> Tr ^ Florence. Al u t“ ern Female College n students . will attend Florence University for 1908-1909* ———— '—.................. —------- ; ]J ’Em w ESTABLISHED to TEAMS MILLEOGEVILLE. GEORGIA Largest and best equiped school South. Expert management. Kailrnad wire connections. Positions guaranteed. Railroad fares paid Board at cost Open year around. Write for catalogue D Great demand for operators. __ and Shorthand at Half Rate! ing. wo are offering our Telegraph,' Course F-to before the ZSth of September. Our equipment is very complete. Healthy Location. Artesian Water. largest Dormitory in South Georgia. Nine expert teachers. Board in sjcilOOL. private home- only J10 uer month. UNIVERSITY AND LOM.MEllCIAL Abbeville, tia. Habitual \ • .» flay bo permanently lOMipitOtl by overcome proper i personal efforts wilHlKc assistance of remedy, I he one Syrup truly I cf lyenejicial and Elixir laxative ofSctma, which enables rigs to|orm regular habits one ture daily be gradually* So that assistance dispense to cl with na¬ when may longer needed- the best of no remedies,wb.cn nature required,.arcto Supplant the assist and not to natur¬ al mately' -functions, which must nourishment, depend ulti¬ e^orts,and upon proper right living generally. proper To get benc|icift| ejjecfs, always its Svrub^ftgS^El buy the genuine ^ ixirf Scrum California manujactur^fty the Fig Syrup Co. only SOLD BY only, ALL LEADING 50{ DRUGCISTS one sue regular price |>er Bottle FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY-FIVE MEN with teams are selling our products to FARMERS in thirty-four, .different States. Seventy useful articles that country people need. We furnish thegoodsand give agents time to turn them into money. Address. J. R. WATKINS CO..Winona. Minn. Take the Place of Calomel Constipation sends poisonous headache, mu r Stomach, hounding through Feted Breath, the body. Bleared Dull Eyes. Loss of Energy Sour and An petite are the surest signs or he affliction. Young s Liver Pills postively cure constipation. They awaken the sluggish liver to bettor actTon, cleanse the bowels, strengthen the weakened parts, Induce appe¬ tite what and aid digestion. They do. do not Price Salivate, 25 no from mat¬ ter you eat. drink or cents your dealer or direct fjrom J. M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS. GA. HEARN ACADEMY " " CAVE SPRING. GEORGIA, “The most thorough Preparatory School in the State’’ will open Sept. 1. Natural park of 15 acres for campus; among foothills of North Georgia; noted for its beauty a: d health record: prepares for all colleges: limited to discount fifty;Christ!an influences; expenses moderate; to ministerial students. For cat*- . logue address C. R. ALLEN Principal. VARIABLE «< Lombard" Improved Saw Mills. FRICTION FEED. ’ Strong Accurate ud RrUtblc. Best material and workmanship, simple, light running, requires little power: easy to handle. Are made in several sizes and are good, sub¬ stantial money making machines down to the smallest size. Write for catalog Mill supplies, showing En¬ gines, Boilers and all Saw lombard Iron Works & Suaply Co., - - - Augusta, Ga. TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un¬ healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do- A germicidal, disin¬ fecting and deodor¬ izing toilet requisite J KiViY of exceptional ex¬ \V cellence and econ¬ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At r (I drug and toilet «»' stores, 50 cents, or $ 'it by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample i 1 WSTH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK SENT ERIC THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mass. eras, It Hltfe aflllcletl weak n»c Thompson’sEyeWater (At-34’08)