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AIR LINE
, ~ TOTHE :
NORTH, EAST,
SOUTH and WEST.
Summer Tourist Tickets
| NOW ON SALE ,
TO
Lake, Mountain and Seashore Resorts
" and all Eastern Cities. _
Full information can be had of any Sea%oard
Ticket Agent, or by applying to .. :
R. H. STANSELL, Ass’t Gen’l Pass’r Agt.,
Savannah, Ga.
OLD TIME SONG BOOK 10 CENTS.
GOLD PLATED RING FREE
WITH EACH ORDER
‘- FOR SONG _ :
BOOK.
§2 dear old tunes we all love, words
and music complete for piano or or
gan, for 10 cents. America, Annie
Laurie, Auld Lang Syne, Battle Hymn
of the Republic, Catch the Sunshine,
Columbia, Comin’ Thro’' the Rye, Dar
ling Nellie Gray, Dixie's Land, Flag
of the Free, Hail Columbia, Home,
Sweet Home, Juanita, Lead Kindly
Light, Lilly Dale, Long A3o, Marching
Thro® Georgia, Massa's in the Cold
Ground, My Bonnie, My Maryland,
oOld Kentucky Home, Old Black Joe,
Robin Adair, Rocked in the Cradle
of the Deep, Swanee River, Sweet and
Low, Blue Bells of Scotland, Last
Rose of Summer, Old Oaken Bucket,
Star Spangled Banner, Vacant Chair,
Those Evening Bells, Tramp, Tramp,
Tramp, Uncle Ned, We're Tenting To
night, When the Swallows Homeward
Fly and twenty others for 10c, stamps
or coin, Particulars of our great of
fer of a Piano Free for a little assist
ance in your own home is enclosed
with the song book., You can earn
a piano by merely allowing your
neighbors to se it, if you send *at
once. For a short time we will send
a gold plated finger ring FREE as a
souvenir to each one who sends =
dime for the song book. Send today
to Piano and Music Co., Galesburg,
Il ts
BONDS AT 80 CENTS.
An old established manufactory ol
high class goods, desires to secure a
little more capital to meet the in
creasing demand for their product. It
offers a small issue of 6 per cent cou
pon bonds at 80c on the sl. §s2s bond
for S2O. SIOO bond for SBO. For full
particulars address Drawer 52, Gales
burg, Il ts
’—___-—___-——__——'—__._____-—'_'—_'———-——-—————'————
€ Generations of live, .wide
awake American DBoys have
obtained the right kind of
FIREARM EDUCATION
by being equipped with the.
unerring, time-honored
STEVENS
All progressive Hardware and
Sg‘orting Goods Merchants handle
STEVENS. If you cannot obtain,
we willship direct, express prepaid §
upon receipt of Catalog Price.
Send 5 cents in stamps for
I¢o Page Illustrated Catalog.
l{(‘a[')lete with
, S 'dE VE I\l 3
& and genera
[ B 2 (R | tirearm in
-4 gm'm:xtion.
&\ J Striking cover
R\i“ in colors.
LN
A 2 ‘ D ® g smevens
-3, ARMS & TOOL CO.
LAP P. 0. Box 4099
N, Chicopee Falls, Mass.
The Kansas Agricultural college
iadlt i as fellows: First grade
B B For more per cent of batter
B BRI grade, 25 per cent and
e %Y 30 per cent! third grade,
= 0 ‘zzss than 25 per cent, butter
say 30 and above. ‘They make
By tter from this, as the overrun
% . ter. 7 j
' Professional Cards.
—
R H. GREEN
~ Doctor of Dental Surgery.
|
| HAZLEHURST, GA.
i Chapman-Patrick Building.
D L P. Pirkl
1.L.1. I ITKIE
Physician & Surgeon
Diseases of women and children a
specialty,
Calls attended to promptly—day or
right. '
Office in. Capital Drug Store. Office
- Phone 51; Residence Phone 92. ,
~ PRIGE & GRANT
| 3
Attorneys at Law
| Hazlehurst, Georgia.
Practices in state and federal
courts. <Collections a specialty. Of
fices upstairs in Court House.
- King & Sellers,
: LAWYERS
Will practice in all the courts.
Office at the Court House.
HAZLEHURST, GA.
w_;_‘———.—-—-—-——"————-——-—
QUINCEY & CHASTAIN,
Attorneys and Counselors At Law,
- HAZLEHURST, GEORGIA.
JULIAN H. PARKER.
= Lawyer
HAZLEHURST, GEORGIA.
- - AT!'B PER CENT
l*’i S - secure loans on your
%, ! farm lands for any amount
| at ?per cent interest.
L e O and see me before you
!' " boriow money. All loans
1 made promptly.
| R. T. WILLIAMS.
| 9-6-06. et
Women Who Suffer
¢Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills are the
best pain remedy on earth. Mother
and .1 have used them for the past
sdven years.” :
MISS ORLEANA SCHIENKE,
Enid, Okla.
Pain is sim})}y nerve disturbance.
Derangements ®in any past of. the
body. irritate. the mnerves centered
there. -
.Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain iy
stop “pain ‘and flmisb;fy because tiicy
allay this irri’t'atiori‘. Womén find
great relief from periodical suffer
ing by taking Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain
Pills on first indication of pain. or
distress. ,
The first package will benefit; if not,
your druggist will return your moneys.
r 47 ) !
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| A“'\\\ TN W-V 7 !
TN .
*?\ e Yy
(AN SR
I OF o
N
SCINTERESNT
"’ TO THE
!
\FARMER
CARE OF CREAM,
Cream will keep sweet much long
fer than milk, if properly cooled, as it
contains less milk serum or food for
the action of bacteria. It should be
kept where the surrounding atmos
sphere is pure, so as to prevent it from
;taklng up flavors by absorption, If
‘cream is kept in a cellar th= walls
lshould be whitewashed a couple of
‘times a year, as lime is a great puri
ffier. Vegetables should never be put
in the same room with cream, It is
lwell to ventilate the cellar during the
might and close it during the heat of
the day.—The Epitomist.
! TO PREVENT GAPES.
I A good method to prevent gapes is
to plow or spade the ground intended
for young chicks as early as possible,
and then scatter air-slaked lime nver
the surface. The lime will destroy
any eggs or other sources of the
worms. Lime is also a roup preven
tive. Disease always leaves germs in
the soil, and therefore the poultry
grounds should beoccasionally stirred
by either spading or plowing, after
"ward using the lime freely. If some
of the lime is sprinkled over the
.ground. before stirring, and then
turned under, ail the better.—larms
ers’ Home Journal.
‘EFFECT OF FOOD ON BONE.
Experiments conducted at the Ne
braska Experiment Station show very
marked increase in the strength of
bone when tankage or ground bone
is fed to pigs in addition to corn. In
tdetermining the strength of bones,
the two principal bones in each leg of
: each animal were removed and hro
ken in a machine. There were four
pigs fed in each lot, making the fig
ures given the average of the break
ing of thirty-two bones in each lot.
The average breaking strength per
100 pounds, live weight; of hogs af
ter, twenty-two weeks’ feeding was as
foilows: °
lot 1. eorn, 325 pounds; lot I,
corn and shorts; 396 pounas; lot 3,
sorn and skim milk, 509 pounds; lot
4, corn and tankage, 580 pounds; lot
5, corn and ground bone, 681 pounds.
SORE HEAD.
Sore head among poultry is of very
comraon occurrence at this time of
vear. It is a phase of roup, catarrh
or inflammation, aggravated, if not
caused by neglect, foul air, damp
quarters or exposure on the roost at
night. In an advanced stage the head
becomes inflamed and swollen on one
or both sides, often obstructing the
sight and many times resulting in
the loss of one or both eyes; but the
appetite is good up to the last, un
less internally affected. Roup or
sore head usually appears as an epi
demic and if a cure is not effected
will spread thyough the whole flock.
In the early stages of the disease cure
can be effected by injecting into the
nostrils a little kerosene oil, anoint
ing the head, if swollen, with sweet
oil and alcohol, equal parts of each,
once or twice a day. Add one-half
teaspoonful of aconite to each quart
of drinking water and keep the af
fected birds in dry, comfortable quar
ters with plenty of sunshine. The
drinking vessels used by affected
birds should be -boiled occasicnally.
—Commercial Poultry.’ ‘ "
RESTRAINT OF SELF-SUCKERSE
* In driving through the country vou
will see cows ‘ornamented (?) with
all sorts of harness — leather and
wood—and ‘queer looking contrap
‘tions, and' the owner will tell you
with a very grim manner that *old
Brindle sucks herself, drat her!”
Here is a plan, in the Ruralist, sug
gested by one who claims to have
proved its worth by actual experience
that is cheaper, easier (on both own
er and cow) and much more unsight
ly than the aforesaid harness:
Proceed this way and you will
have fixed for gocd the most persist
ent sucker on the farm: Insert in the
sucking heifer’s nose an ordinary bull
ring. Just before inserting the ring,
slip .on it two common liron harness
rings—of course the harness rings
are to suspend loosely after the bull*
ring has been inserted. This is the
trick of it. By adding more than one:
loose ring the animal can in -no way
ipr'event them from dropping in“the
mouth when it attempts to suck:
‘Brass bull rings can be purchased'in
almost any hardware story for twen
‘ty-five cents each, and the common
iron harness rings cost but a f&w
cents per dozen,
Italian women may not engage in
any industrial pursuit which occupies
their time at night. Males under ff
teen years of age are also berred
freo night work. e \
" TABLE DrfioTE! coNomY.
Chicagoan Escapes Part of the Tax
on Those Who Care Not for Wine.
The man frem Chicago, convoying
a party of five women relwives about
New York, dropped into a restauran.
for dinner. They wanted the tahle
d'’hote dinner, which was advertised
at $1 with wine and $1.25 without
wine, '
This variation in price dldnt
plense the man from 'Chicago.. Ho
himbelf was on the water wagon ant
he knew that.none of the women folk
wanted wine. Naturally he objected
to paying any $1.50 extra for a nega.
tive quantity. ; \ .
Then a plan came to him to save
at least part of that $1.50. He calldi
for the wine card and ordered the
cheapest bottle of wine on it-—a clar
et at sl. The waiter brought the
wine, opened ‘it and was told he
needn't serve it '
The Chicago man saved 50 cents on
the dinner and the waiter was in 2o
bottle of wine. There was some ta'k
of taking the wine away with them
but tee waiter's longing look at it
prevailed.—New York Sun.
A Pension Horse.
A faithful Government servant has
been recognized and rewarded by
Ormsby McHarg, Assistant Secretary
of Commerce and Labor. This ser
vant is an old horse named Caleb,
which for twenty-four years has de
voted his energies to pulling a wagon
belonging to ithe United Seates fish
commission at Green Bay, Me. Last
week, after a serious attack of boils,
he showed his inability to serve the
wovernment any further by lying in
his stall and refusing to be harness
ed.
The officers at Green Bay, knowing
that the animal's days of usefulness
were over, reported the fact to the
Department of Commerce and Labor
and asked for a new horse, also ex
pressing the intention of Killing
Caleb. This report fell under the
eyes of Secretary McHarg, and he
immediately issued an order
that the fatthful animal be plac
ed in the pasture until he had 2
natural death. This is cne of the few
cases on record in which a horse had
been placed on the Governmeat's
pension rolls.—Chicago Tribune.
Pastor Acts as Minstrel.
The Rev. Louis J. Richards, pastor
of the Church of the Messiah,. Univer
salist, appeared at Fort Plain, . Lo
as interlocutor in a local talent min
strel show. The performance' was fer
the benefit of his church and was at
tended by a large audience As a
middle mao Pastor Richards was a
brilliant suocess. o add to the od
dity of the occasion and indicating
the breaking down of bigotry bar
riers John J. Galvin, editor of a lo
cal newspaper and one of the fore
most Catholics in this region, was
one of the end men.
Mr. Richard is a young and pro
gressive pastor of liberal ideas and
plans which he fearlessly executes.
He is a Texan, and when a theclogi
cal student wen highest honors for
oratory in that State. His appear
ance in a minstrel show caused much
shaking of heads and quivering of
chins among the staid and conserva
tive Mohawk Dutch of the valley.
Germany has spent $150,000,000 in
the last twenty years in the develop
ment and improvement of inland wa
terways. As a result the empire has
now 8.278 miles of navigable streams
and canals.
Charms Children
, Delig’hts Old Folks
Post Toasties
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" YHE PENGUIN'S WINGS,
After New Feathers Start Old Are
Retained as Protection Against ?old,
Ornitholegical puzzles are the pwn.
guins, with their curiously shaped
wings and odd unbirdlike upright
carrigges. The peculiarities of their
wings suggest that the penguins are
descendants of birds which used thelr
wings rather than legs in the pun
guit of prey under water, and as the
struggle intensified between the com
peting individuals the mest expert at
thig sort of swimming 'would get the
most food and oust their less success
tul riyals, The winners gained ad
vantage over their neighbors In pro
portion as their wings improved as
gwimming organs, and inversely and
of necessity became less .suited o
perform the work of flight.
In all other birds the feathers
though shed annually are more or
‘ess gradually displaced; but in the
penguing the new feathers all stars
into being at the same time and
thrust out the old feathers upon their
tips, so that these come away in
great flakes. Whereas in all birds
save penguins the new feathers as
they thrust their way through tuo
skin end in pencil-like points, formed
hy investing sheaths, in the penguins
these sheaths are open at the tips
and attached by their rims to the
roots of the old feathers, and henc:
these are held to their successors un
til these have attained a sufficien!
length to insure protection against
cold. :
This curious device for retaining
the warmth afforded by the old feaih
ers until the new generation can fill
their places is apparently due to the
fact that penguins. are natives of 'ho
antarctic regions, al‘hough some now
inhabit the tropical seas.—Chicago
Tribune. ,
Future of Aviation.
Very different are the views held
Hy prominent aviaters as to what po
gition the science cos mechanical flight
will have attained five years hence.
In the opinion of Captain Ferber,
who is one of the keenest pioneers
of aviation in France, the aeroplane
will at that time be able to carry
four or five people with ease, and
there will be a regular service of ma
chines between Dover and Calais, as
well as between other ports where
the distance is not of great length.
Clesed accommodation will be pro
vided on board these machines, which
are to be of such a size that their
use will be debarred where the
gpace is limited. Other opinions are
much less hopeful as regards the com
mercial side of the aeroplane’'s pos
sibilities, and, according to Mr. Mau
rice Farman, the flving machine will
for a long time to come be reserved
tor the use of the intrepid sports
men. The Comte de Castillon de
Saint-Victor likewise thinks that the
carrying capacity of the aeroplane will
always be limited, but its speed will
increase.—New York American.
A String to It.
“I was walking along State, street,
Chicago (the windy city), when a sud
den gust relieved me of my straw
hat. I turned, gave chase, and after
a lengthy run at full speed pounced
upon it. At the same moment a
gtranger (also perspiring and almost
breathless) took it from me and
thanked me kindly. ‘But it’s my hat,
said I. ‘No, sald he, ‘yours is hang
ing down your back on a string.’”—
r.ondon Globe.
The crisp, delicious,
golden-brown food,
made of Indian Corn.
A tempting, teasing
taste distinctly differ
ent—all it's gwn
“The Teste Lingers”
Sold by Qrocers. u
Popular pkg., 10c.,
: I..argb Family size, 15¢c.
Postum Cereal Co., Lid,
Batsle Creek, Mich.