The North Georgian. (Cumming, Ga.) 18??-19??, April 02, 1909, Image 3

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Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it. How To Find Out Fill a bottle or common glass with vour "water and let it stand twenty-four hours; ®a brick dust sedi ment, or settling, stringy or milky appearance often indicates an un healthy condi tion of the kid neys ; too fre quent desire to the back are also symptoms that tell you the kidneys and bladder are out of order and need attention. What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills almost every wish in correcting rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. Corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant ne cessity of being compelled to go often through the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest be cause of its remarkable health restoring prop- , erties. If you need a gßcilg’iaSgSS medicine you should IbgSSijiSSagSsji; have the best. Sold by druggists iu fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes. Home oi~Swmp-Hout. You may have a sample bottle sent free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer it Cos., Bing hamton, N. Y. Mention this paper and remember the name, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. The Great Diarrhoea and Dysentery Remedy Cures acute and chronic diarrhoea, dysen tery, cholera morbus,“ summer complaint,” Asiatic cholera, and prevents the develop ment of typhoid . ver. Same wonderful results obtained in all parts of the world. “WORKS LIKE MAGIC.” IJ1I1K) Price 25 cents per box. Don’t accept a substitute —a so-called “just asgood.” If your druggist hasn’t it and don’t care to get it for you send direct to THE ONTARIO CHEMICAL COMPANY, Oswego, N. Y., U. S. A. WOMER SALVE The Sreai Remedy for Family Use. AB that the Bams implies. A Harvafous /flWj )} Retnsdy for /yy&jt aii Extarnal Afasoiutsiy Free Poisonous JL Ingrsdieats. Cures Burns, Boils, Cuts, Sores, Sore Throat, Piles, Eczema, Corns, Chapped Hands, Scabs, Rheumatism, Ulcers, Felons, Carbuncles, Cancerous Sores, Barber’s Itch, Blood Poison resulting from rusty nails or other causes, Bites from poisonous animals or insects, and all Wounds and Skin Diseases. AT DRUCCISTS OR) OR p BY MAIL POSTPAID j *OO. per BOX. HAARER & SONS, Ann Arbor, - Michigan. INKffOUT Nature’s Ink Eradicafor mi Stain Remover. IMPROVED -and PERFECTED Absolutely Harmless. Positively removes Ink Stains from Paper, Linen and White Goods, Leather and the 1 lands. Also removes Mildew, Iron Rust, Drug-, and Fruit and Berry Stains. Lvervbody who uses ink needs Ink-Out. No office complete without it. An absolutely infallible Ink and Stain Remover is an invaluable adjunct to any household. We guarantee “ Ink-Oat.” Your dealer is authorized to refund your money if Ink-Out does not do all we claim for it when used according to directions. Take no substitute —ask for “Ink- Out ” and insist on getting it. The genuine bears my portrait and fac-simile signature on the top of each box. For sale by stationers and others. PRICE 25 CENTS. If your dealer cannot supply you send 30c. In stamps end we will mail you a package direct. JOHN DIAMOND, Sole Manufacturer, Philadelphia, U. S. A. ANENT WHITECONVICTS Prison Commission Will Dispose of Them Temporarily. TO 00 ON THE PUBLIC HOADS Farm Will Be Purchased as Early as Possible and the Whie Convicts Will Work It. Atlanta, Ga. —The white convicts of the state will have to be placed temporarily upon the public roads. There appears to be no escape from this disposition of them following Gov ernor Smith’s refusal to approve the purchase of the Wimberly place in Twiggs county as a state prison farm. It is not that the prison commission will refuse to make further effort to find a farm which conforms to its ideas as to what the law contemplates, but that, as Chairman J. S. Turner stated, the commission does not at present know of any other available farm w'hich, in its opinion, would till the bill. The commission, Chairman Turner stated, will proceed with its investi gations with a view to finding and buying a farm at the earliest possible date, but to do this in time to lake care of the white convicts on April 1, or at any time within the next month or more, he states, would be manifest ly impossible. It is practically settled, therefore, that the 300 white convicts of the state will have to go temporarily on the public roads. The commission will not, however, distribute them pro rata among the counties of the state. It is its pur pose to dispose of them as “overs” or as the new law contemplated "overs” should be disposed of, should there be any. The white c'onvicts will be sent chiefly to the larger counties of the state, such as Fulton, Richmond, Bibb and others if they are prepared to take them and work them separate and apart from the negro convicts. It is said that Fulton would take all of them if the commission should so award them, but it is likely they will be divided among three or four of the larger counties. This policy will be pursued because of the fact that the arrangement will be only temporary and it is the com mission’s purpose to get a farm and put them on it just as soon as it can do so. LIQUOR LEAGUE^PROHIBITION LAW. Model License Organization Suggests a Vote of People Be Taken. Atlanta, Ga. —Definite proof of the fact that the manufacturers and deal ers in whisky and other alcoholic bev erages are making a concerted effort to bring about certain changes in the present prohibition law in this state, has recently come to light in the shape of a letter that has just been received by a member of the Georgia legislature from an organization of liquor men known as the National Model License League, with headquar ters in Louisville, Ky. It is presumed that every member of the legislature has received a sim ilar communication. The letter re quests that the voters of Georgia be given an opportunity of expressing their exact wishes in regard to the sale and use of alcoholic beverages. The manner in which this may be done, according to the letter, is by permitting the people of the state to vote for or against the saloon license, the tavern license or the merchants’ license. The term saloon license is self-ex planatory. tavern license is explained as a license to permit liquor to be used with meals at hotels, while a merchants’ license is one that allows liquor to be sold in original packages not to be opened on the premises of ihe merchant. In case no form of license were adopted, prohibition would be the result. The letter states that the league does not favor the sale of alcoholic beverages in terri tory" where the people do not want to use liquor and that the league will not oppose any law against the use of liquor in prohibition territory. GEORGIA PEACH UNHURT. Fruit Growers Believe Crop is Now Practically Beyond Danger. Adaiisville, Ga. —It seems that the Georgia peach crop for 1909 may oe safely said to be practically without the pale of danger with reference to the possibility of serious damage from severe frost or free. Such is the opinion of prominent growers here, which is the heart of the Elberta sta tion of northern Georgia. As the orchards about Adairsville are the ones that are farthest north in the state, they are the ones most J’kely to be affected by the cold. The fact that they are pronounced safe by the principal growers of that sec tion is a pretty good indication that : tile 1909 peach crop throughout the state is in good way' to bring a nor- j mal crop in point of quantity, and one ; that will be most sansiactory in the quality of fruit produced. BLEACHED FLOUR BARKED. Cannot Be Sold in Georgia After Octo ber First, Next. Atlanta, Ga. —In line with the re cently promulgated decision of the na tional department of agriculture, un der the pure food law, forbidding the interstate shipment and traffic in flour bleached with nitrogen peroxide after July 1, 1909, the state depart ment of agriculture issued an official order prohibiting the sale of such bleached flour in Georgia after Octo ber 1 next. The mill men will stop using the blenching process at once, and will have time before the order goes into effact to dispose of the stocks now on hand. STATE GLEANINGS. Preparations are being made to give special accommodations to the large number cf school and collegia gins throughout Georgia and this section who will attend the great Southern Music 'festival at Atlanta next May, the sth and 6th. From a number of colleges will come parties tanging in number from ten to fifty. Such delegations will be given seats side by side in the same section of the big auditorium. The festival prom ises to be one of the most important educational events that the south has known, as well as being a rare entertainment. The Augusta flood commission met and abandoned the idea of building an eight-mile levee on the ground that it would cost too much. Acting on the suggestion of the commission er of Public Works Wingfield, they adopted a report which recommends the expenditure of a third of a mil lion dollars for protective measures. The long litigation which has been pending about seven years involving the state’s claim for taxes on fifteen thousand shares of the capital stock of the Western Railway of Alabama, owned by the Central of Georgia Rail way company, was settled *■/ the pay ment by the latter company of $225,- 000 in satisfaction of all claims for taxes against this stock to date. “Whenever I reach any determina tion with reference to my future, which in any sense concerns the peo ple of Georgia, I will very promptly take them into my confidence by pub lic announcement.” In addition to being a tacit announcement that fie has outlined no definite political course for the future, the foregoing statement, given out by Governor Smith constitutes a very interesting portion of an emphatic denial of a recent article appearing in the Macon Telegraph to the effect ’that he "will either be the next governor of Geor gia or will name the man who Is.” The article in question was sent out from Atlanta and quoted the govern or as having said to a friend, “I will either be the next governor of Geor gia, or I will name him. It looks as if I’ve got to be a candidate again. Un less ail sides join in making Murphy Candler Mr. Brown’s successor I will be in the race.” The governor class es the interview as a "fake” and says that while he can not take time to contradict all newspaper stories about him, he feels called upon to deny the rumor appearing in the Tel egraph. A peremptory order was issued by Judge J. T. Pendleton, of the superior court, directing State Treasurer Roo ert E. Park to deliver to J. L. Riley, appointed as receiver of the Georgia assets of the Southern Insurance com pany of New Orleans, the SIO,OOO guarantee deposit, which he has .been holding for the protection of the Georgia creditors of the company. Receiver Riley will take charge of the fund, and will administer it Tor the benefit of the creditors of the in solvent company in Georgia. Just about the time he was to don baptismal robes and enter the fount of the Second Street Baptist church at Macon, young Charles Miller, aged 23, found himself in the firm clutches of the law. The young man joined the navy about four years ago and then decided the work was too irk some and left. He came back to Ma con and decided to join the church, during the services in the water , About the time he was preparing to get into the regulation garments worn during the services in the wa ter, Police Officer Watson surprised him and arresied him in the name of the government for being a deserter President James E. Dickey of Em ory college raised $2,000 for the col lege endowment fund at Montezuma following a sermon he preached R. W. Bishop, patent attorney, re ports the following patents granted Georgians: Dental plugger, William Weichselbaum, Savannah; set wonts for saw mills, H. M. Lofton, Atlanta; rotary engine, A. T. Snodgrass, Thom asville; plow scrape bxace, T. P. Mar tin and A. J. Martin, Sale City; rail fastening, J. M. Fountain, East Ma con; cotton chopper, J. D. Maddox, Culverton; fifth wheel, J. I. Ray, Bluff ton; alarm attachment, A. H. John son, Newnan. Reports from various parts of the naval stores belt in Georgia and Flor ida indicate that the reduction in the cut of boxes this season is far great er than is generally believed. It is claimed that in many places the cut has not been one-third as great as last year, while in other sections it will not run above one-half as great. The state prison commission has notified the Ben Hill county commis sioners that they will get nine negro convicts instead of the six first awarded them, and that they may ue forced to take their pro rata part of the white convicts of the state in case rn stste farm is found before the first of April. John Galletta is under arrest at Savannah charged with violating the prohibition law because the police found ten bottles of wine in his home. He declares that he bought the wine to regale his friends at the coming christening of his infant son. Jesse B. Hart, a well known under taker of Macon, recently recovered SBOO worth of diamonds that Mrs. Hart lost last summer. She had tA sparklers in a purse which she lost. The rings were found by John Hunt, who kept them but said nothing of bis find. Recently a man named Epps did some work for Hart, and Epps happened to learn of the where abouts of the gems. He told Hart about It and the diamonds were re covered. The owner was so overjoy ed that he let Hunt go. Burglars entered the grocery store of Loo Yan, a Chinese of Augusta, and took bodily from a place near the front door a small iron safe, contain ing mone y and valuables, to the amount of about ssol>. ■ \ I strictly high-grade, having yjrivft m | thousands ot artistic endorsements from welt known mu- W sicians. used in over four hundred public schools and over H three hundred conservatories ot music. |j|. UNION LABEL PIANO MANUFACTURED Jr Every piano has the name of the name of the manufacturers Bl BUSH & GF.RTS, Chicago, cast in the plate. Buy no piano jjf that does not have tiie name of the real manufacturer cast in the Bt-V fjfl plate, or you will be getting nothing but a stencil. Fra I/I Send tor a copy of “The Story of the Stencil." Also makenppli'-atinn and SI / Jim receive one of our beautiful souvenirs—sent free Agents wanted in a I nunc- 81/ [if . cupied territory. Pianos shipped direct to customers, freight uiul expense*} W 1!/ * prepaid. EASY PAYMENTS, hemember the name. BUSH PURIFY YOUR OWN DRINKING WATER. A new and scientific invention for pro- Ihw-—if—*TP ducing absolutely pure water by anew ■ ||t' ft process of boiling, evaporation and II TB THE EXCELSIOR WATER STILL rfyi ’’nif i^Ml 1 makes a fVesh, delightful, wholesome drinking taj ■'Tit water. It extracts every impurity. Water sup un plies itself to both tanks as fast as itboilsaway. }f/ \f^ v ' ' Twr \ All parts work automatically. Air inlet condute <SMR* r _y j pipe with separate outlet attached to coil. Per ““ 1 111 mits all poisonous gases to be driven out by means of a current of pure air which is forced through the steam as it is being condensed. Thoroughly reaerates the water. Marvel of construction and production. The first practical family still ever made. No more fever germs. Remember Alteration does not remove impur ities. Used in Macfadden Health Home and Public Schools. . , r- Representatives wanted in unoccupied territory. Send for circulars and testimonials. EXCELSIOR MANUFACTURINO CO., Nashvlllo, Xonn . - ASK YOUR DEALER FOR A PBEDIViOINT J BUGGY \AM Made in one grade only Bgi liaMpp’ r '"”7" s V solicited from live dealers. f PIEDMONT BUCCY CO., "V--/ “ We sell them wherever we go; they go wherever we Sell them." THE CUSHMAN 4 CYCLE MR STATIONARY 6ASBUME ENGINE Ig&Jyl/tQ embodies the- up-to-date methods used in automobile I It engine construction, but includes that of the long I II 1 lived s+ r4 ‘,ui.my engine. \\ o see to it that all parts I subject dto great stress and wear, are made of i • proper viterial, and at the same time all unneces- J sary weight has been avoided. Made of the best c —| gte material and by first-class workmen. Noted for the KgySrwKA 1 Jsy lightweight, for the power, and the accessibility of Pp|lPP|‘'\ moving parts, and also its simplicity. Every engine SEND FOR CIRCULAR AND FRICE. CUSHMAN MOTOR COMPANY, - Lincoln, Nebr.* high point BUGGY GO. riSf, i—Manufacturers BEST MEM PRICED BU6BY M THE SOUTH. There's a reason why. if you hav’nt agency wuito us shout Its Wholesale on!y s Address HIGH POINT, N. C. I BREEDEN’S RHEUMATIC CURE is a guaranteed cure for Rheumatism, both inflammatory and chronic. Purities the blood, liver and stomach. It is sold under a plain positive guarantee to re fund the money if a cure is not effected. This remedy has relieved chronic and long continued attacks of rheumatism after the best physicians had failed to do so. It is a preparation that cannot be excelled. Has been tested by the people, leading druggists, merchants and physicians ; also some of the leading manufact urers of the country. These men of authority all pronounce Breeden's Rheumatic Cure perfect as a preparation for rheumatism and having no equal. Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Act. Price SI.OO. For Sale by Druggists. If your dealer should not carry this prepara tion, write direct to us. BREEDEN MEDICINE CO., Inc., - Chattanooga, Tenn. J UNFERMENTED 6rape Juice , Pressed from selected Concord j l Grapes. For the table; for f the sick room. We have produced * the delicious Naboth Grape Juice for many years, but we believe this year’s product is the crown of perfection. Naboth Grape Juice stands for pro gression. Better each year. Im proved by the wisdom of each year's experience in careful pressing and developing. Naboth Grape Juice now going out is, we think, a little better than ever before. In color, a beautiful deep red; flavor, that of the Concord Grape, taken from the cluster in October. The delicious sweetness is due to the superior quality ofNalxoth Concord Grapes. Every bottle guaranteed to comply with the National Pure Pood Law. Delicious, lure, Invigorat ing. For sale by dealers. THE NABOTH VINEYARDS, Brocton, - New York. r=> M O S F M o DON’T sufferwith indigestion TAKE PHOSPHO. DON’T suffer from full stom ach after eating! TAKE PHOSPHO. DON’T have a headache! TAKE PHOSPHO. DON’T have that taste in your mouth in the morning! TAKE PHOSPHO. DON'T take Calomel! TAKE PHOSPHO. DON’T have “that tired feelihg! ” TAKE PHOSPHO. DON’T suffer with Stomach and Bowel Troubles! TAKE PHOSPHO. DON’T SUFFER WHEN YOU DON’T HAVE TO! TAKE PHOSPHO. GUARANTEED. Which means that if you are not satisfied with PHOSPHO you get back the 50 cents you paid for it. Directions with every bottle. TRY PJHOSPHO F= ft O. S 1-1 O