The Brunswick daily news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1903-1906, May 31, 1903, Image 3

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SUPREME L REVERSE Be H jgr~~ f'le, dri(2-up, derelict , id be nvchout those al jot mankind—bacteria! f ;ftot begin to appreciate /SI importance in physiol- Jp arts. The possibilities ft Hans Mol Inch's discovery fp ria lamp light cannot be * f- Farewell to gas and elec ' JX monopolies! A simple glass C /llnod with saltpetre and gela- HI /osculated with bacteria. Two H* / -ter inoculation the jar becomes * mated with a wonderful bluish a light, caused by the innumer rf bacteria which have developed time. The light will burn bril liantly from two to three weeks. It is ra perfectly cold light, too, a desidera tum in summer.—Victor Smith, in Odd Fedow's grand lodge will meet in Mobile next year. and members of me l thtfc. usual, and she tie- Sk-**'should be gulliy of conduct know In the morn . .■" that act declares shall . constitute I '''. ,'° i . <■ , Mint you please stop tM ■ Alga cause for removal from office. Ari*n nno y S me so I can't nir kfci ' 'Jf iwo,- p. 240 ff. mma medicines, wore plasters; none of these thilfgs helped me. Reading of the cures that Lydia 11. jPinkiiam’s Vegetable Compound lias brought about, I somehow felt that it was what'l needed and bought a bottle to take. How glad I am that I did so j two bottles brought me immense re lief, and after using times bottles more I felt new life and blood surging through my veins. It seemed as though there had been a regular house cleaning through my system, that all the sickness and poison had been taken out and new life given me instead. 1 have advised dozens of my friends to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Good health is indis pensiable to complete happiness, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s vegetable Compound lias secured this tome.” Mrs. Laura L. Bremer, Crown Point, Indiana, Secretary Ladies Relief Corps. SSOOO forfeit if original of above lettei proving genuineness cannot be produced. Every sick woman who docs not understand her ailment should write Mrs. Pinkhain, Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and always helpful. Jackson’s Love for His Wife. v Jackson’s wife died suddenly just after he had been elected President. It was a great* blow to him, and he was never the same again, though his strength of will and his desperate courage fought with this infinite pain. For the rest of bis life he lived as she would have had him live, guided his actions by the thought of what his wife living would have him do— loving her still, with the love that paßseth all understanding. As the years went by, this love became almost sacred. Every night before he retired he read her prayer book, with her miniature, which he _ Ji wore in his breast, placed be jFit. He wa3 a lover still at ▼•.ty-eigbt, for just before he died Bald, with lingering tenderness, iff von will be no heaven to me if not meet my wife there.” He declined the sarcophagus fit for an emperor, that he might be buriad as a simple citizen, in the garden by her side. His last words were of her, his last look rested upon her portrait, that hung directly opposite his bed. and if there be dreaming in the dark, the vision of her brought him peace at last. —Woman’s Home Companion. An Interesting opinion relating to misers and spendthrifts was recent -dy delivered by a French judge. The Paris correspondent of the Chicago Record-Herald says that M. Magnaud, presiding in the Chateau Thiery tri bunal, laid down the principle that trustees should be appointed to force misers to expend money. The matter arose from a request to appoint a trus tee for an alleged spendthrift accused of dissipating her patrimony. Mr. Magnaud rejected the application, de claring that interference with the expenditures of prodigals not insane to be a grave attack on the rights of property, adding that the expenditure of accumulated wealth Is necessary for the community’s general well-be the aforesaid corollary re- ft is rt "Y.J- fu!ly 2000 *eie -11 I be cllan SP<3 before I the movin S germ get U U UjNffnotber year. This does not JT such a surprisingly large ■j ri 1-:. but when the fact that all the H. must be done in less than a V -onth is considered, it becomes evl ”dent that the telephone man is a pretty busy fellow about,May 1. To change this number of telephones and circumvent the scores of trouble some Incidents that are bound to crop out in such a general shift of location, is a problem that requires not a little cool calculation and untiring observa tion. In the first place the service of a patron of the company cannot be cut until the "mover” is established In new quarters. Frequently some hitch in moving plans occurs at the last mo ment, and it is the business of the tele phone man to keep track of all these little incidents and to know exactly when the old line should be cut out and the new one opened for service. This work is many times complicated by the fact that patrons refuse to al low their old number to Be changed, so that often the same number appears twice, thus adding to the confusion. The general exodus would not result In such great confusion if it were not for the fact that every one is in a hurry and wants a telephone in the old loca tion as long as he remains there, and another in the new when ho moves in. The work was considerably increased this year by the fact that several big office buldings were opened on May 1, thus easily doubling the regular labor usually encountered at this time of the year. In order to keep up with the change of location orders this year a force of 250 linemen and telephone experts were put to work, and night and day they have been struggling to catch up with the rapidly moving flat dwellers and building tenants. It will be a week or two yet before they finish.— Chicago Tribune. How She Canglit Him. Perhaps he really didn't know how late it was when he reached the little apartment in Hamm. At the click of the latch key in the reception room door his wife awoke. She didn’t know how late it was dither, but she knew Then Ned fummyd about in the dark, not wishing to provoke a curtain lec ture by lighting kjie gas. and the t*£, ing was over for the night. Next morning a* breakfast he V **: absorbed in the newspaper, and not in the mood for conversation, especial ly about the doings of the night before. But his wife began mildly: “Did yon have a good time at the club, dear?” “Oh, yes.” was tlte bland reply. “Ned, what time was it when you came in, do you think?” asked the wife, sweetly, as if it didn’t make a mite of difference, anyhow. “Oh, a little after twelve,” was the laconie answer. Then she administered her sugar coated pill, with her most ingenious air, of course. “Strange, Ned, isn’t it! You remembered stopping the clock, dear, don’t you? Weil, it hasn't gone a tick since then, I am sure, and it registers ten minutes before three!”— New York Times. No More While IT mine Gardens. The last relic of the White House gardens has been removed. It consist ed of the white painted office building which was formerly occupied by the head gardener and which adjoined the camelia conservatory. It fell just out side of the line for the new executive offices of the President, and was not disturbed until recently. Then it was jacked up onto a dray wagon and hauled through the streets of Washing ton to the Smithsonian Institution, frightening the horses nil along Penn sylvania avenue. It is to be used as a watchman's lodge in the Smithsonian grounds. There Is now no sign whatever of a flower garden about the White House. The supply of roses, hyacinths and other blooms that are used in the White House comes from the propa gating gardens, about a quarter of a mile to the south of the Executive Mansion. Every day a wagon load of flowers is brought up to the south en trance to the President's house and distributed through the various rooms. —Brooklyn Eagle. . AVl]y Many Young Men Fall. It is the fault and the cause of the failure of so many bright, capable young men that, being put into a cer tain workday rut, they make no effort to climb or even crawl out of it; they do not seek the work that is not rou tine, and go beyond the terms of the bond, in search of additional labor in order to attract the approving notice of their employers. They do not go to their posts before nor remain at them after the fixed hour. They are con tent to do enough, and no more than enough, to earn their hire. The life of the average clerk is generally genteel, easy,cleanly; he need not soil his hands nor liis clothes, and his ambition is satisfied with these pleasant condi tions.—Philadelphia Ledger. Growth of Yachting:. The ease with which a small yacht pan now be acquired and the present day facilities for getting from the me tropolis to majiy seaside towns and river ports hart, served to popularize the delightful pastime or sport of yachting among ;,:hat potent and nu merous section /of the community ag the €E JS tK.8.8.) cukes jit Skin # A BF / j lc-r, Cancer, Itching Scabby , Bone Faina, B<ood Poison, Etc. CaT ,-SISATISI> CASES A SPECIAETV. rfend no money. Simply write and try Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) at our expense, to prove that B. B. B. cures the worst and most deep-seated Blood and Skin Diseases. If you suffer from bad blood, pro ducing itching scabby eczema, scrof ula, cancer, blood poison, ulcers, eating sores, bone pains, pimples, offensive eruptions, swellings, ris ings on the akin, offensive catarrh or deep-seated old rheumatism, we advise you to take B. B. B. It has cured thousands of the worst cases, even where the body was a mass of ulcers and boils, blood thin, with agonizing, itching, burning skin, and where doctors, patent medicines and Hot Springs failed. Blood balm kills the poison or humor in the blood, heals every sore or pimple, makes the blood pure and rich; aches and pains vanish for ever. Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) thoroughly tested for 30 years; composed of pure Botanic ingredi ents. Good for weak stomachs or weak kidneys. Drug store ¥1 per large bottle, with complete direc tions for home cure. To prove it cures, B. B. B. sent free by writ ing Blood Balm Cos., 322 Mitchell street, Atlanta, Ga. Describe your trouble, and special free confidential medical advice sent in sealed letter. B. B. *B. sent at ones prepaid. The Baby's Reflections. I am a baby, eleven months old, and nearly worn out already. Please let me alone! I am not a prodigy, except to the extent that, not having anything to say, I don’t talk. Two big persons claim to be my parents—why can’t they let it go at that? I have never denied the charge. I haven’t much data to go by, but I don’t think I am either a magician, a learned pig or a virtuoso. I don’t hanker for applause, so it will be an appreciated favor if you won’t put me through any parlor tricks. If I have my wealthy old uncle Ezra's nose, congratulate Uncle Ezra, but don’t blame me. I may be a klepto maniac for all I know, but I can’t help it. Don’t rattle racties at me—they rat tle me. Don’t goo-goo and ootsle kootsie at me. I can’t understand it any better than I can the English lan guage. The pain I have is not in my stom ach but in my neck. I don’t want to be entertained or mystified or medi cated or applauded. And, if you don’t want me to grow up to be a hypochon driac, a stamp collector, an awful ex ample, a ping pong enthusiast or a misanthrope, you just lemme he!—The Smart Set. FITS permanently on ted. No lltsor nervoat ress after first day’s use of Ur. Kline's Gres': Nervelt estorer. 12 trial bottle’and treatlsef roe Dr. it.H. Kline, Ltd., PHI Arch St., Phila., !'s The owl ntav have a reputation for wis dom, and yet he never looks on the bright side of life. Use Allen’s Foot-Kase. It is tlio only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet,Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to he shaken into the shoes. Cures while you walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent Free. Address,Allen S. Olmsted, Leltoy, N.Y. There are some people who would cheat at solitaire. Soldiers and safe robbers are obliged to do a lot of drilling. Fruit acids will not stain goods dyed with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. It doesn’t take a contortionist to pat himself on the back. I’lso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.—Wm. O. Endßl,ey, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. iO, 1900. The fellows who are adepts at making love don’t make the best husbands. MVNCER SPOT. lgerous spot for Diabetes, Drop sy. Bright’s Dis ease. Cure Kid ayiaMWMimiiiTiJ ney and Blad der troubles before they reach the seri ous stage. Read how easily it can he done. W. J. Hill, of 40 South Union street. Concord, N. C., proprietor of hardware and harness store, Justice of the Peace, and one of the best known residents of that city, says: “Doan’s Kidney Bills proved a very efficient remedy In my case. 1 got a box at the Gibson Drug Store and used them for disor dered kidneys and backache, from which I had experienced a great deal of annoyance, trouble and pain. The kidney secretions had bothered me for a long while, were very irregular, dark colored and full of sediment. The Bills cleared it all up and I have not had an ache In my hack since taking the last dose. My back is much stronger and my health generally is improved a great deal. I am glad to make a pub lic endorsement of the Bills, trusting that it may be the means of relieving some other sufferer.” A Free Trial of (Ids great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Hill will lie mailed to any part of the United States on application. Address Foster-Mil burn Cos., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by •li droggUU, prig* 60 cents per bos. THE BRUNSWICK D AIL if *EWS. Whitewashing Stables. The beneficial effort of whitewash ing stables two or three times a year Is being brought to public notice con siderably by the action of various city boards of health In different parts of the country. Farmers should attend to a matter of this kind without a mandate from a health officer. With a small hand pump with a rose nozzle a man can whitewash more space and do it more thoroughly in an hour than it could be done with a brush In 10 hours. The whitewash should be made thin, free of all lumps, and mixed with a little dissolved glue.— Connecticut Farmer. Cow Pea Hay as a Feed. In feeding value well cured cow pea hay Is similar and about equal to alfalfa and red clover hay. Curing of cow pea hay requires especial care to avoid dropping of the leaves which occurs if the vines are over ripe when cut, or if in curing they are too long exposed to sunshine. We often cut just after the dew ij off, turn the vines several hours before sunset and put in windrows or cooks toward the middle of the next day. Hay caps are very useful In curing cow pea vines if the weather becomes unfavorable. The mixture of crab grass with pea vines aids in retaining the leaves. We have satisfactorily used German millet for the same purpose with the e*,„y varieties of cow peas, sowing iis bushel of the latter and one peck of the millet per acre. As emphasizing the Importance of retaining the leaves by curing pea vines partly in cocks we give the following facts brought out in tests made at the Alabama experi ment station with six varieties. The leaves averge 30 percent of the weight of the thoroughly dry hay. The leaves contained 22 percent protein, against 9 and 12 percent in the coarse and flue stems respectively; and 7.5 percent fat, or about four times the percentage found in the stems. In starchy material the leaves and stems were on a practical equality, contain ing 21 to 33 percent nitrogen —free ex tract. Cow pea liay resembles wheat bran in composition and in part can be substituted for it. —Alabama Exper iment Station. Effects of Moisture in the Soil. Moisture is just as essential an ele ment of fertility as the mineral plant food. Many soils containing a very high percentage of soluble plant food are a barren waste because of a lack of moisture. All plants in a green state are largely water, the percent age of water in the mature plan run ning as high as 91 and 92 percent, ■n the case of such succulent crops as beets and turnips. An abundant supply of moisture is needed not only because it forms the bulk of the crop but more especially for the solution, preparation and trans portation of the mineral plant food of the son, wnrrotlt wMOn It otm Ho no use in crop production, also for the dissemination*of these materials and those obtained from the air through out the plant. On the other hand it must not he too abundant. It must not fill all the pores of the soil so as to exclude the air or the land will be rendered un productive while this condition exists. Plants that will thrive in water will not thrive in a soil saturated with wa ter, because in the water culture the water is free to move and the con stant change bringing different parts constantly to the surface in contact with the air a certain amount of this air is absorbed, replacing any that may have been taken out by the roots; while in a soil saturated by water there is not this opportunity for the air to enter. This suggests another element of fertility, says Professor Edgerton of lowa Agricultural college in National Rural. poultry Yard Wisdom. The following practical poultry notes are selected from Commercial Poultry: The man or woman who loves pure bred poultry, but is so situated that There is but a limited amount of space available, can extract, fully as much pleasure from a flock of bantams as could be got from a flock of lordly Light Brahmas. They are easily con fined and thrive wonderfully on a small space. They are readily tamed and become very interesting pets, cost of keeping considered, they pay fully as well for their feed as almost any of the larger varieties. Most of the breeds are prolific layers, and their eggs are very large when (ho size of the fowls is compared with that of thd larger breeds. No matter what breed of poultry is chosen purebred stock pays belter in dollars and cents than nondescripts which have no particular breeding and are of no value beyond the lowest tnsrket price. fancy for poultry lea,ds to profits in more than one direc tion. Pure bred poultry is worth more on the market than common stock. Not only does it bring a higher price, but it costs less, for purebred stock will make a greater weight on a giv en amount of feed than can be got from feeding mongrels. Pure-bred hens produce more eggs (ban mon grels, and the chicks hatched from their eggs may produce specimens of extraordinary value even in the hand of a novice. The man who breeds pure bred poul try of any kind always has the great er value of his products in the open market as an inducement to maintain the purity of his stock, and besides this the chance of producing a large percentage that may he sold at home without effort for breeding stock at much more than the market value. Cleanliness in the Dairy. In no article of human food is so much fiitii consumed as in dairy pro ducts. When milk or cream is or dered, even at our best holds and res taurants. dirt is frequently found at the bottom of it if it is allowed to stand a short time. This is not ap petizing. to say the least, and it is driving people who like milk to us- lng something in Its stead. This greatly reduces the consumption of milk, and at present Americans do not consume more than one-third as much, milk per capita, as Is used in some European countries, say3 Prof. W. J. Frazier, of the University of Illinois. Many persons use as little milk as possible, because of the careless way in which it is produced and the fear that it may contain disease germs. As dairy products are usually consumed in the raw state, there is, of course, more danger on this account; but when in proper condition, they are both healthful and economical, and would be consumed in much larg <r quantities if people could always obtain them clean and of good quality. Simply because wo are accustomed to doing a thing in a slipshod way is no reason for its continuance. We are living in an age of the most rapid change and improvement, and the sharpest competition. The public is be coming more intelligent and is de manding better food products year after year, and unless the dairymen fall into line and march with the pro cession by producing clean milk and dairy products their consumption will certainly decrease. People will not' continue to drink milk in which a sed iment is found, and lo eat poor butter and cheese. It is then to (ho inter est of the dairymen themselves as well as the general public that attention be given to the production of milk, but ter and cheese that are clean and at tractive in appearance, as well ns of superior quality. Vegetables as Egg Producers. "What Is your secret of getting so many eggs the whole year round?" asked a neighbor the other day. “Your hens never seem to take rest, for you are selling eggs when I have to buy, and I have moro hens than you have. I would like to know' your secret.” I told him I did not have any secret, unless It was the vegetables I fed my hens the whole year round, for I am obliged to keep my hens penned. This neighbor fed his hens plenty of grain, as well as a variety, and also gave them a warm mess every morn ing. He had a warm henhouse, yet he had to buy eggs in winter to sup ply his table, while I, with fewer hens, had eggs to sell In January', when they were at their highest val ue, and also used them on the table. I always feed vegetables raw, and I think they give better results than If cooked, and save much trouble. It is remarkable how fond the fowls be come of these vegetables and how greedily they devour them. In summer I give them cucumbers, lettuce, cab bage, turnips, beets, tomatoes —in fact, all kinds of garden truck. When I plant I always count in the chick ens. In winter one has to depend on cabbage, beets, turnips, carrots and potatoes. In feeding vegetables, I chop one end, so as to give the hens a start. Cabbage I hang up by the stalk, so the hens can have some thing lo pull at. I give my hens the best'-anW don't put them off with rot ten vegApbles. These.yegetablft are -AaaiW *'fl*V"* V' — -'“'VV- 1 c ti a-- V. lar rooiwi, jey can be stored away in pits or {ca^.s. I alsd; use. In connection with other grains, sunflower seed, and, as they contaiq much °H, they help to take the place of worms and grubs. All scraps from the table are fed to the hens, and milk is used freely. A great many people seem to think that poultry do not need water in winter, but in this they are mis taken; they need good, pure water as much as we do ourselves. Hens will al ways reward us for all the care we give them.—M. M. W-, in New York Tribune Farmer. IJniformlty of Cattle Weights. Attempts have been made by a num ber of experienced breeders in Indi ana to produce a uniformity of weight in steers fed for the market, and some quite remarkable results have been obtained. One batch of a score of steers were raised on the farm so that they averaged 1300 pounds each alter six months of good feeding. They were fed up to this time on a uniform ra tion which caused a steady and con tinuous growth, but it was impossible to maintain the uniformity of weight thereafter. While at six months of feeding they weighed less than 25 pounds difference when taken singly, they gradually widened this until at the end of the year the heaviest had a gain of 75 pounds over the lightest. The grain feed was the same for all the cattle, and they were treated in every possible way just the same. The question which has been raised by this experiment is whether It is not possible to keep a uniformity of standard weight in steers up to six months much- easier than to a year. In the first six months the steers all showed a steady and continuous gain, which showed that their food agreed with them, and brought out the best there was In their natures, but after that period their constitutions changed a little. Inherited gifts and tenden cies began to develop in some, and they slowly outgrew the others. If this theory is true, it is much more satisfactory to secure breeds that will keep a uniformity of stand ard weight up to the time they are ready for marketing. The loss on the few which dropped back in the feeding experiment would in the ag gregate amount, to a considerable item. Of course breed alone will not. settle the question; nor breed and feed together. The individual will show characteristics that will develop in spite of breed and feed. But if one can make it a point to select tile in dividual according to the highest standard of merit from the best breeds, olid then feed them satisfactorily, the results should be sue!; r. uniformity of standard weight v h’-h would enable a man to calculate in advance within r.o pounds the exact weigh i if his bunch. —S. T. Warrenton, in Ameri can Cultivator. Successful Experiment, i "Maiiel married that awfully dissi pated young Fiutterby to reform him.” “And is sn? satisfied with her ■ choice?” “I should say she is! His uncle died last week and left him half rgillioa . -' ! -.-Cleveland plain Dealer. r * ™ ™ **• f* 3 I*l §y|9B£Hp> * ;, y ■ *r ; Address Dr. Iltirlman, President of the Hartman Sanitarium, Co lumbus, 0., lor free advice. W UNCHESTER a—.wl"" „ |f“| SUFLE PISTOL CARTRIDGES. | Vgf It’s the shots that hit that count. ” Winchester £ IT:' , Rifle an( l Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that is, ' II they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene f trating blow. This is the kind of cartridges you will get, f~~"~ if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make. ' ALb dealers sell winchester make of cartridges. L DOUGiLASp (ft f~<, SS.SSand 53.82 Shoes 8® \ kfr \ Oil <um aAv** X?.'J.OO 10M1R5.00 vmtWjF :j| . o \ w*ariii,\V. 1,. ]>vu K l„ H HKJ.fto or < I *\\ V riy nro jtat a* good in ereryjf* m Woselhat H |-A. > // y'k tHMjn owtiug ypu [mnai-HO In tfS.OU^fhH /7 ; jraL p imiiHMiKe khlooT vIiJSMWI.t:; - .7 1 i\|i. '*vx'-' thuii superiority ovirr hU iu 'Z A Zcl dflfs Fy retail UcMhi-b Adr , Jr The DwuitU* sfi-ret prore** of lannina ihelmHnm snip* I W. L. Douklhß m tkes ami tflls more men’s produces moro flexible nml loneir lestlior Goodyear welt <h'incl-sewert itocobs' ulioes than liny oilu r imoHge Ti.e •■lr* imvo more tliiwi <fou- than uny o* her manufacturer in the world, bird iho pasi four tearn, wlilc h provo Its suprrlorUj. fIIOC flftH Dotlfatfl •'‘HI he puid lo anyone who mi Sulfa- •p*-3iUUU nc!TolU ' anriiHi.iuvelhißHlaltMncnt 1802 Sales: Hf.T.w-ft.tMO.oo 1 Made of the beat Imported and American lenttien*. “Having takon your wonlorfnl “Uaacarutß’.’ tot three month* nml uciug ontiroly <*ure<l tit* btomueh Catarrh ami ily*i.fi*l:t. I think, it of iruiuo Is d’ioto“< asearotH 'foi’ their v.umlorfitl compuaition. I have tukun numerotm other so-called remedies out without avail and I find that ('aei’wrota relieve Hi"re In a day thuii ull tho otheiu 1 iiuvo taken Would in a year." James McUune, 108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. Mf The Bowels mocm CANDY CATHARTIC Plena ant. T’nlntnhle, Potent. Taato Hood, T)o Hood, Never Sicken, Weaken or 10c. 25c, Wic. Never sold in bulk. The gcnntno tablet stamped 0(10* tiuuruntccd to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or N.Y. 592 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Blw y° u nm own w BW wind up with \ i Hires ||| Root beer fm |j|Pnßk That will *Vt you 6 ' l|j|jp While shopping a little while ago, a lady absentmindeaiy walked away with another customer's umbrella. “Excuse me,” said the latter, hurry ing after her, “you’ve got my um brella” “Why, so I have,” was the crestfal len reply. "I am awfully, dreadfully sorry. Accept, my humblest apologies." The apologies were accepted; but this incident reminded lady No. 1 that she wished to purchase some umbrel las for herself and daughters, so a little while later she took her seat, in the train laden with three of these useful articles. Opposite her sat the la/ly she had encountered earlier. “I see.” remarked the latter, sweetly, "that, after all, you have had a most Anoier.t Stone Plough Found. Avery ancient, stone plow, supposed to hav" belonged to the mound build ers,' was unearthed recently near Princeton, 111. It was found by a farm. digging a well several feet be low the surface and jtlt t above a vein of coal. Tli, plough was of reddish stone, was triangular in shape, meas uring thirteen inches each way. i I ESks mK ail übh Fails. j I Best Cough Syrup. Taste* Goo - Lee | I \r. time, eo :: l>y ikui'islsts. 1 MPrnoN -r Br ' v * -4H' Tired, Nervous, Aching.ffem : bling, Sleepless, Bloodless. - # —,— * ’ Pe-ru-na Renovates, Regulates, Restores. -T • A Pretty New York Woman’s Rqooverj the Talk of Her Numerous iTiemls. Mrs. ,T. E. Finn, 82 East High street. BHlla!o,.N. Y. f writes: Peruna Medicine Cos., Columbus, Ohio. Gentlemen, -.—“A f'sU/ yews.ufn / had to give up sociaL-life, e%- lireltff as my'health uftzs corn ftletely broken down. The doctor advised a complete rest for a year. As this teas out of the question for a time, / began to Look lor some other means of restoring my health. “I had often heard of Peruna as an excellent-tonic, so thought a bottle to see what it would, do f<>r me, and it certainl-ij took hold, of my system and, rejuvenated, me, and in less than two months T was in per feet health, and now when I feel wont, out, or tired, a dose or two of Peruna- is all that I need,.’’--Mrs. J. E. Finn. Catarrh Causes Female Hiseases. America is the land of nervous women. The great majority of nervous women are so because they arc suitering from some form of female disease, lly far the great est. number of fpi.ule I roubles are caused directly by catarrh, These women despair of recovery. Female trouble is so common, so prevalent, that they accept it as’almost inevitable. The greatest obstacle in the way of recovery is that, they do not un dertsand that it is catarrh which is tho source of their illness. In female complaint ninety-nine cases out of one hundred are nothing hut ca tarrh. Peruna cures catarrh wherever located. Avery & Company # H< rci-'.SS Hi avery & mcjvullan. South Forsyth Sc., Atlanta, Qa. —AI L KINDH OF— MACHS NERY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all Sizes. Wh*at Separators. BIST IMPROVED SAW MiU ON tAKIII. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. String). MMI9, Corn Mills, Circular Sows, Saw Teeth, Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Engines & Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. K'jelcV Morphinism; Alcoholism, tt Tobacco Hub!’, an<l % *J W Ncnm-tlieiiiii rofttllly Mtoioe'' j|*lri to tho KooJey treatment. <Ol • ejijiohdence coiiflilontiul. Wilt* for pamphlet. I <-l) phone 4'.)3. Keeloy institute. U 720 Avo. D. I.Simlngham, Ala. IIS ODSV iV'/ef f P.emovi 4 all • ’veiling in Bto 2o / duvs ; elk ts a permanent euro Jk+tr* A -j" ■•-. to ' > d:i\-4. jihi 11 f itment **. ct -11 fit • : -1 him hi I- fairer V Wi if.- Or. It. M. Green’s Sons. 7tfr Snerih'ista. Atlanta.*!• OUIN-INDIA IMLAHIA W Am. 22, 1903. cartridges and shot shells are made in the largest and best equipped ammunition factory in the world. AMMUNITION of U. M. C. make is now accepted by shooters as “the worlds standard" for it shoots well in any gun. Tour dealer sells it. Tli e Union Metallic O art rid C^o. Bridgeport, - - Conn. CStlfTfl <"• “MJ ’iHH'i'.l CtTIINO, UK I .?• ii A New Varela rfe Remedy, GUji.'*; l ,and Sores. Caro GaoranleeU i.t Every Case Treated. KAHQMAL CANCER MEi’ICINE COMfAS*, Aiiiteii EuUgipg, AtitßUki lj % t" ■