Newspaper Page Text
tfHXJRSDAY MORNING.
-iM
Refrigerators.
low Aveidge Temperature Freedom from Condensaf'-.,, .„ ,„„„ r w,ii
longer'ami ean'sh Retris f ralors ca “ carry One Hundred Pounds of Ice
longer and can, show a lower temperature in the shortest time.
Furntturf to nt VnTT !‘ me , r! aV T * ult * of Piazza and Lawn
gret E o>- untintto ‘ a ann(l 1 on ' h ma<l ° of ash and maplo. painted red.
urices ' ,ron braces - Set t 'hem and compare quality and
G. McGfIRVEY,
See the
RELIANCE-SHAMROCK 111
YACHT RACES
li ■* '•. ’KOt
The flallory Line
has arranged for remarkably cheap trans
portation from Brunswick to New York and
return on account of the
International Yacht Races
*
for the American Cup which will take place
|L off Sandy Hook beginning on August 20.
The rate for the single trip, Including nreals.
will be sls, and for the round trip s3o.'
These Rates
will be good on any New York bound steam
er on and after August 1 arid they will be
good for the return trip until September 4
giving ample time for the completion of the
races, additional time for sight seeing and
shopping in and arourd New York before
the limit expires. , •
For further and fuller information apply to
W. M. Tupper and Cos. Agents,
Brunswick (la.
GASOLINE
ENGINES
Stationary and Marine
Fairbanks, Morse & Cos, Make,
C. W, OEMING,
Agent, Brunswick, Ga.
The Wastes of the Body.
Every seven days •he blood, mus
cles and bones of a man of average
size Joses tv,o pounds of woraout tis
sue. Titfs waste cannot be replen
ished and the health and strength
kept, up without perfect digestion.
When the stomach and digestive or
gans fail to perform their functions,
the strength lets down, health gives
way, and disease sets up, Kodol Dys
pepsia Cure enables the stomach and
digestive organs to digest and assira
i,aie ail of the wholesome food that
may be eaten into the hind of blood
that, rebuilds the tissues and protects
the health and strength of the mind
and body. Kodol cures indigestion,
dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. It
is an ideal spring tonic. Sold by
Joerger’s Pharmacy, Smith’s Pharma
cy and W. J. Butts,
ANNUAL. MOUNTAIN EXCURSIONS
Southern Railway Offering Cheap
Rates to Many Points,
On August 19th the Southern Rail
way will sell round trip tckets to the
principal mountain resorts at the
exceeding low rates named below;
Asheville, N. C., $10.50; Brevard,
N. C., $10.SO; Flat Rock, N. C„, $9.70;
Hendersonville, N C., $9.80; Hot
Springs, N. C, $11.75; Lake Toxaway,
N. C-, $11.80; Saluda, N, C-. $9.60;
Waynesville, N C., $11.75.
Tickets will 1.0 good returning until
Sefember 2d.
0, L. CANDLER,
QenwaS Agsal;
Cheap Real Estate,
One of the prettiest homes on Tro
on street, lot 90x180; 7 rooms house,
rice $3,619, payable SI,OOO cash bal
ance one, wo and three yeacs 6 per
cent interest Grand opportunity for
someone.
For bargains of all kinds call on
US. 6ROSSTCN, FENDIQ & C.O
Pea! Estate Bargain*.
$3,500.00 for one of the prettiest
, houses on Union street. Lot 90x80
j and 7 room hou„a $250.00 46x90 near
[ the business center. $1,000.00 for 4
room house, close la. SBOO.Co for 4
small hou -a, rent at $16.00 per month.
$200.00 for 3 room house, brings $6.00
per month.
BROBBTGN. FENDIG & CO
In Good Shape,
The News job office has resumed
business and is ready to do all kinds
of work on short notice, Let us bid
on your next job.
DeWitt is the Name
When you go to buy Witch Hazel
Salvo look for the name DeWitt on
every box. The pure, unadulterated
Witch Hazel is used in making De-
Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve, which is
he best salve in the wrld for cuts,
burns, bruises, boils, eczema and
iles. The popularity of DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Salve, due to its many
cures, has caused numerous worth
ess counterfeits to be placed on the
market. The genuine bears the name
of E. C. DeWttt & Cos., Chicago, Sold
by Joerger’s Pharmacy.
Great removal sale is now on at Mrs.
M. Isaac’s. All goods will positive!}
go at cost prices.
* For ■'Dorothy Dodd” shoes, the lat<
tor w 9o>ea, sea J, A, Smith, Now
BROBSTON MADE
GREAT SPEECH
(Continued from first page.)
would be hard to say.
That our farms can ,) ield more dol
lars per acre than the farms of the
West, that our factories pay better
dividends tHan the lactones 01 me
East, that cattle can he fattened lor
less per pound in Georgia than in
Kansas, lias been demonstrated again
and again. That machinery can be
constructed cheaper in Macon or At
lanta than it can ba constructed in
Providence or Pittsburg, is being .de
monstrated every day. That vessels can
be constructed more cheaply on the
coast of Georgia than on the coast of
Maine, is easy enough to demonstrate.
That health conditions in t lie South,
particularly in Georgia, surpasses the
health of New England or the West,
is illustrated by stat isties: it is part ie
ularly illustrated by the death record
of those who were encamped during
the Spanish-A merican war.
Yet with all these natural advan
tages, with all our talk about being
the Empire State of the South, are we
not laggards in the race for material
development V
As compared to the Southwest, or
to the great Northwest, 'with their
continuous tide of new people, with
floods of money pouring into t hem from
our own, as well as from foreign coun
tries. is not Georgia but receiving the
eddying drift of this prosperity tide?
We are prosperous, it is true. 'Pin re
are many who believe we are doing
well enough: there may lie even some
who would he content to erect a (hi
nese wall about us. or in complacency
sit down to say, ’‘let the world i iisii
on qn its mad haste for wealth, let
well enough alone, it is good enough
for us just as it is.”
But is it not t his “let well enough
alone” policy that is largely responsi
ble for that ultra-conservatism of otir
people? that self-complacency, so to
speak, which has characterized Geor
gians, is it not largely responsible for
keeping away much of the brain, en
ergy and money which has gone else
where, instead of coming in to develop
our State?
Had we been more liberally disposed,
had we been more progressive, would,
we not have developed much faster?
Why should the Carolinas outstrip !
us as manufacturing States? Why. in
proportion to advantage or natural
conditions, many of the Southern!
States should ha ve ah ead.) gone ahead ;
of us along development lines? We 1
ever proclaim ourselves as the Empire
State of the South, yet, is il not very .
much of a question if we are t rui.v I lie !
Empire State at ail?
There is a strange thing running t
through all human nature, which up-!
plies alike to individuals and to na-j
Hons. It, is, file more favored by nat -!
ural condit ions, the more liable to de- j
pend on those- natural conditions: j
while less fortunate neighbors, grap-
pling with unfavored circumstances,
often struggle past, to bear away tlie
coveted prizes.
In 1880, the world began to realize
the returning importance of the South.
Reports were scanned to see what was
the relative importance of the South
ern States. Georgia had advanced to
fourth place in population (30.2 per
Cent), while Texas (with 94.5 per cent.)
had passed to second place, Kentucky
and Tennessee both being ahead of
Georgia.
In real estate Georgia remained
sixth, witli $130,983,941, a decrease of
2.8 per cent. All showed large de
creases excepting Texas. North Caro
lina and West Virginia., which showed
gains of 111.5 per cent, 22. J per cent.
9.5 per cent respectively.
In farm values. Georgia fell to
eighth place: and while gaining 3M
per cent, did not keep up witli the
other States, being passed by North
Carolina (96.9 per cent) and West
Virginia (58.8 per cent): and in the
point of recovery, South Carolina
showed an increase of 76.5 per cent:
Florida, 122.6 percent: Texas. 217 pel
cent- Her capital, however, in manu
facturing increased 48.4 per cent, and
amounted to $20,672,440.
In 1890 Georgia was third in popula
tion, (increase of 19.1 per cent): in real
estate she remained sixth, (showing a
gain 60.8 per cent): but Texas gained
154.9 per cent: Florida, 220.9 per cent;
Alabama, 99.9 percent, and Arkansas
96.2 per cent. She advanced to seventh
place In farm property: increase 32.2
per cent, in dollars amounting to
$189,249,198. In manufacturing she
was fourth, with a gain of 175.4 per
cent, having a capital ol 856,921,580:
but in percentage of gain, she was
out-classed by Texas (406.4 per cent J.
Louisiana (203.2 per cent), Alabama
(377.1 per cent), Mississippi (215.1 per
cent), Arkansas (407 per cent), and
Florida(24o percent).
In 1900 Georgia stood second in pop
ulation (20.0 per cent increase), fourth
in real estate value (increase of 93
per cent), and the largest in the South, i
but mainly represented in urban 1
growth, the real estate amounting t o
$434,336,134. In farm property she had
increased 20.7 percent, and stood fifth;
but in manufacturing she dropped
from fourth to sixth, although in
creasing 57.7 per cent, with a capitali-j
zation of $69,789,656: but Texas with
art increase of 133.3 per cent. Virginia
with 63.4 per cent, Louisiana with
225.4 per cent. West Virginia vvil h
98.2 percent. North Carolina with
133.6 per cent, Mississippi with 140.2
per cent. North Carolina with 130.1
per cent, and Florida wilh2lo.l per
cent, out-classed her in relative pro
gress. All this goes to show a defi
ciency of industrial growth for GeOr
gia during the past twenty years.
In 1880, Georgia produced 24,394 ton
of pig iron, and had $4,135,900 invested
in iron and steel manufacturing en
terprises: but in 1890 she only pro
duced 29,185 tons of pig iron, and tier
iron and' steel plants had dropped to
$908,243, while in 1900 siie failed to
make any individual or separate re
cord for tlie product, ion of pig iron, and
her steel industry fell la 8055,916.
Thus her iron industry has decayed,
though she is rich in ore beds am.
ill coal. She mined a few tons of coat j
in 1880, she. produced 228,339 tonsinj
1890, arid 315,557 tons in 1900.
In all her mineral resources -coal, j
iron, clay, gold and marble—si,, only:
produced a' valuation of $457.7.17 ,a
1880, $2,817,700 in 1890. and $3,11-- 333;
for Ikon, which K a. bagatelle com-j
pared with what she is capable"!,!
yet in most of these, she is fa behind i
the percentage of increase b, other
States. In iB6O site fed a!) the South c. :
saw milling industry: in 1900 stood j
ninth, which position ahe now occu
pies.
In 1880 Georgia was second a.*
cotton-producing State, making a few
bales less than Mis-issue ; and i
THC BRUNSWICK DAILY ntn*
| Why. <
Pay as
Much
for an inferior beer ?
Schlitz beer costs twice
what common beer costs
in brewing. One-half
I pays for the product; the
i other half for its purity.
I One-half is spent in
I cleanliness, in filtering even
j the air that touches it, in
I filtering the beer, in ster-
I ilizing every bo:;. And
i it pays the cost of aging
the beer for months before
we deliver it.
If you ask for Schlitz
you get purity and age,
you pay no more than
beer costs without them.
Ask for the
Brewery Bottling.
Morgan & Davie
212 & 214 Buy St . ’l'h.mo No. 92.
Brunswick.
ton manufactures led all the South,
j wji li her eapital of $6,319,000, consum
ing 71,390 bales, in loot) she not only
| fell to third place as a cotton-pro
| ducing State, but also to third place
! in cotton manufacturing, though site
had increased her capita) engaged in
this industry to $24,159,000, consuming
304,136 bales.
There are some who believe Georgia i
lias been fearfully derelict in not keep
ing better pace with lior sister States,
that she lias not been sufficiently lib
eral in her laws for theeucouragement
of capital.
Now as to what we might do to en
courage more liberal investment of
capital among us. there is much to be
said.
There are things moral, there are
things legal, there are tilings indus
trial, and tilings political to he dis
cussed. Of course t here may be those
who would argue that we do not need
to encourage capital at all, but there
are those who have come to believe
that the iirst great step towards com
mercial supremacy for Georgia will be
for her to remodel Her constitution
and improve Her laws.
They believe that, for liide-bound
narrowness, our constitution lias no
equal in any other State, particularly
in that it does not. permit Georgia to
advertise her resources, and denies to
each municipality or county 1 He right
to encourage new enterprises by ap
propriation or exemption, whether by
vote of tlie people or otherwise. They
believe that in this it is nothing less
than the subversion of a Democratic
doctrine of local seif-government cer
tainly too narrow it is for a real,
greater Georgia.
It may have been the right thing to
do at the time when Gen. Robert
Toombs “locked the treasury door and
flung away the key," for then we were
under the shadow of reconstruction,
with all Its horrors fresh, aud the fear
of a negro domination yet upon the
people,
But chose things have passed like
wise those feelings have passed with
the passing years, until were Gen.
Toombs alive how, doubtless i;e would
be ready to unclothe lock which im
pedes the progress of his native St ate:
surely, he would at least restore to
eacli community the legal control of
its own affairs. One of the results of
our constitution is that Georg ! a is one
of the most poorly advertised Statesof
the Union, as to what she really lias
to offer to tlie investor or the home
seeker.
Those who would learn about, tlie j
resources of our State fr / the purpose i
lof comparison with otlm States, are;
at a Joss to obtain reliable, up-t o-date j
statistics. Most any other State will'
furnish more fuels and figures, be-;
cause most of them maintain wide- j
awake, well-equipped bureaus for the
purpose.
Our Department of Agriculture re
cently printed a book of information,
but the edition was well nigh ex
hausted in supplying the people of
Georgia with some information about
their own State.
J doubt not there are many, even m
this pat riotic Georgia audience, who
have not read the book, if indeed there
are not some who have never seen it..
That our Agricultural and Geological
Departments are pooily maintained,
is one trouble witli us: and wen; their
work better known, it, would be tlie
means of bringing vast capital into
Georgia.
Surely where we know so little of our j
own resources, then to the outside
world it must be a scaled book, so hu
as concerns specific information.
We should gather and maintain up
to-date statistics as to what we have,
as to what we are doing, as to what
we are capable of doing: then sys
tematically advertise such data to be
had so that when enquiry is made,
reliable, specific answers ma begi rt
Let our State maintain Midi
equipped department working on
these lines, keeping in close touch
| with tiie real estate men and the rail
: road industrial agents of tlie country,
; and with tlie newspapers, which after
: all are the great est engines of develop
ing Industry, and It witltukeß 1 afew
vi-ais to witness such a doubling and
'trebling of taxable wealth as will
prove a marvel to th.e country.
It may be well enough to fix the
limit of tax rate beyond which the
Legislature cannot go, yet you cannot
atlortl to cripple your schools, nor neg
lect the infirm or the decrepit old sol
diers. Your SI ate economy lias gone to
the point of niggardliness already in
dealing w il h some of its depart merits.
I'll, refoiv. the most pract leal way to
decrease taxes in Georgia is todevelop
more taxable wealth out,of our unused
natural resources, and the way to do
that is to encourage new money toem
bark in this development work.
The best way to encourage new
money is by fostering new enterprises,
and by protecting those who come
here t o develop them.
What Georgia most needs right now
is more diversified industries fori lie
development of her raw product.
When, at. tlie hist Democratic State
Convent ion, was proposed a resolution
calling for amendment to our consu
ltation, by which counties or towns
j should be permitted to exempt for
j taxes, or make reasonable appropria
tion to encourage new industry, it
failed to pass the commit I ees. because
it was said the farmers w ill never con
sent to let manufacturing be exempt
nor money appropriated to advertise
the State. Now, why should we fear
logo to t he farmer with a proposition
of rllls kind?
For every factory that comes, there
is added a demand for t lie farm pro
duct. Within every county where a
factory town has been built t lie re lias
been a marked enhancement of value
to farm hinds. The Soul hern farmer
is rapidly becoming a factory man
himself, us employer- or employee.
It is not for Georgia to hold back
longer: it should he Her province to
lead in t lie march of progress which is
sweeping the Anglo-saxon race into a
position to dominate the world's com
merce. and il is up to us to hasten
1 hat time when capital will lx.eit.lier
developed here or supplied from
abroad until, for every hale of cotton
rolled out of our gins, there will be
rolled out of our mills a bale of cot ton
cloth: for every saw-mill there will lie
creeled a box factory, a furniture fac
tory, or a sash, door and blind factory:
for every blast furnace or rolling mill
in Alabama, there will be a foundry
or a machine shop in Georgia, turning
out finished products until it would lie
just as natural to see the name Macon,
Atlanta, Home or Augusta in raison
letters upon pieces of machinery,
showing where manufactured, as it is
now to see Providence, Pittsburg,
Boston or Brooklyn.
The South already manufactures
nearly one-half the volume of cotton
'goods made in this country, but she
ought to manufacture 80 per cent of
all the cotton goods produced in the
world, instead of, as at present, manu
faet uring less than 8 per cent.
There is one tiling that the South
has not yet comprehended in all that
it means, it is, that the cotton crop
and tlie negro are essentially ours,
and the tiling to do is to make the
most there is of them; for witli these
t wo properly handled, we are in a posi
tion to master the world of finance.
One more generation will see the
South the negro's warmest defender,
and the North his bitterest foe.
That the white man must govern
tills country is but a fixed law of na
ture) which both races are coming to
recognize without regard to section.
If the Whit e man guides the black man
to a better life, to a higher plane of
citizenship, then will both have
rounded out their destiny; and the
better element of botli races are fast
get! mg together in the South for t lie
uplift ing of both on practical and edu
eat ional lines.
Before this comes to pass complete
ly. or t iie South reaches its highest,
development, the narrow political
prejudice, both North and South, will;
have to be broadened, Whenever tlie j
"Solid South" breaks up. then will tlie |
walls of prejudice come toppling down, I
and then may capital roil in faster;
than it lias ever before. So long as we
place party above country, and reject
those things that would develop our
resources simply because tlie sugges
tion does not originate in the domi
nant party of tlie South, just so long
will we be regarded as ultra-radical in '
our feelings: just so long will we be re- 1
garded as intolleraht of the rights and ;
feelings of those who might come i
among us differing in view us to the
general policy of our government, !
: The way t o set tle t lie negro question
is to quit talking about it—educate
i them along industrial lines, encourJge
i them to be self-respecting, encourage 1
I them to be home-owners: let them un- j
| derstand that we propose to take cave
|of them and support their efforts at,
better citizenship, while we rigidly,
j enforce 'ugianey laws impartially)
{against all idling, shiftless people. ' j
i 1 lie black folks mainly see to pro-j
ducing. the cotton staple, which the!
white folks of tlie South ought tube
making into yarn, sheeting, shirting,
prints and thread: sending it abroad
ta t he world, mixed witli tlie brain and
brawn of our own people, securing
therefor the tribute ot gold that is to
make the posterity of t hose who iive
1 hi Die Sout li now tlie richest people of
all the future.
A ten-million bale crop, at sto per
baie. is worth less than a half billion
dollars, but made into the eoarset
cloth it is worth a billion, and for
every increased grade it nearly doubles
tlie value.
Our cotton seed, it issaid, were they
ai> utilized to their fullest extent,
manufactured into all ol their bi
products, would be worth annually to
tlie Soutli tlie enormous sum of ten
billion dollars.
The South is an inviting field for
capital, because, besides undeveloped
1 raw material, climate and health con
ditions, tlie labor trouble hero is less
acute- more likely to remain so, for
jibe reason that we are training up a
: < ration of our own boys who are
not afraid to work, who are rapidly
! assuming the helm of great commer-
cial interests,
Our technical schools are turning'
them out rapidly: these boys know j
how to manage our own labor,' and un-J
derstand Southern conditions. No
where in this country do we see the
white man and the black man working
side by side as it is In the South, ami
together they are going to workout,
|t lie Southern sal vat ion.
i But perhaps the greatest one thing
, .lust now we can do to encourage cap!
t cii to come into Georgia is, to timid
among our own people a stronger spirit
of Greater Georgia: to develop that
sentiment until it shall pervade t lie
very atmosphere of tlie whole State
with high confidence in our great fu
ture, so that it will impress the
'stranger Immediately when hu ap
pears in our midst.
, Let us develop that sent iment which
,nf all limes and ifi all places will irq=
nci (hi to hold up the bauds of those
President
Suspenders
Ease
Comfort \ /fpps|*
Freedom >_OSS?/
Durability
Metal Parts Rust Proo* (1 J^V
Positively Guaranty if \| Ar J
“President" is on Luckies. Idltd /MSjr J
Everywhere 50 cts.. liU- 7 ;&'■ f
or by mail postpaid. ‘I /ffl i
Llghl or iliirk, wide or narrow. Jl >*, I m I/
'L/ i /
C. A. EDGARTON MEG. CO. % S'j. m-4 /
9 Bo* 476, Shirley, Mmj. Vv'/ ? VH "1
Bear m Mind
That we
>-••• *mt, cutlery and eportlno
goods. Fishing tacKle.
EMPTY AND LOADED -SHELLS,
SUN AND SH;rCi_e REPAIRING.
P.O. KESSLER
Monk Street
Not Over-Wiac.
'I Ihtp is an old itllpgorical plftim*
Gi a |?if* scar*#i| ;,f the grasshopper *
Init in tho not of hoodie*-Iv tnvt.hiDr
on a snake. This is parallelled by
I ‘bili wuo tqiooiis a latv.e tmni of
money budding a cycler-, —OMr. hut
neglect to provide ins family vi.:t
a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colie. Choi
era and Diarrhoea, Remedy an a safe
guard i against Hnvo! complaints,
whose victims outnumber those of
the cyclone a hundred to one. This
remedy everywhere recognized as the
most prompt and reliable medicine
til use for these diseases. For sale
hy all druggists.
Pure Chemicals are the only kind
used at Jim Carter's clothes cleaning
establishment. He <e reliable and
wenSe four Work. Plume TJ,J-S
Freshest vegetables in town at
Chris, Arnhoiters, Newcastle anil Monk
streets.
s.>sh. doors earl blinds for gale
t tv r o-i Hard war* Cos.
who are trying to get new men and
new money to come among us: let us
develop that sentiment, that will drive
out tlie croakers everywhere, and sus
tain every effort at enterprise and pro
gress.
Let us determine to put Georgia at
t lie head of every profession of pros
perity. Let us begin to remodel our
antiquated constitution, made in the
days when our fathers bated the Yan
kees, while the wounds of civil war
was fresh upon them.
Let us provide more lilxvral and pro
gressive methods: let us provide a
comprehensive, systematic plan or ad
vertising. Ltd us acquaint the world
with what we have of advantage in
health, in society, in opportunity for
business, in all t hat makes life wort h
(living. Let us not forget that while
j we are of Georgia, and of the South,
1 we are also Americans.
I Let us have fait li in tlie grand (lest i
ny of our great country. When pessi
mists points to history with predic
i mis of degeneracy, corruption and
decay, growing out of the eollossal
wealth, power and presl ige of our na
tion; let us thank God with tlie opti
j mist, who sees only bright visions for
! the future: who believes that iu free
j schools, in the Australian ballot, and
in tbespreadingprinciplesof Christian
faith, is tlie complete solving of al) the
'perplexed and perplexing questions
which confront mankind, and in the
mail whirl of t lie present, hour sees but
tlie daybreak of millenial dawn.
Whatever may be the future, or
whet tier pessimism or optimism pre
vails, of one thing we are fairly safe
it is, that we and our children shall
'have lived in tlie grandest period of
i alt t lie world's history, having much
I to do with file movement Hint must
send civilization forward or hack ward
with tremendous force,
j Personally opt imist te where, the fu
It tire of my country is concerned 1
I would that, we try all tilings, holding!
to that, which is good, and believing
In no better way could we contribute
to the well-being of our country than
ill pressing Georgia to the forefront, of
i those States t hat encourage capital to
j develop ihe hidden resources of na
jttlre, which God lias stored so very
bountifully within Hie confines of our
loved Sout bland.
n Doctor.
' f amj just tip fmm a tvtKr) spell <>;
I lie flux (dy soil!tery) says Mr. 'I A
Pinner, u we!! known rmorhant •••
Drama*,ud, Toim. "I used oho Lull;
of (.IstmhfTluin\s Colin, (’lud< ra a
Diarrhoea Remedy and war run
without having a die: i. I < >u . :
it the host, cholera medicine m i
world." There ia no use of employing
a doctor when this medicine Is used,
for no doctor can prescribe u In i ■
medicine for bowel complaint In ,v.
fi rm either for children or adult .
it never failn amt is pleasant to talte
JTor wie ty druwttt*.
’AUGUST 13, 1903.
ißlli
if VOU FUEL LANGUID
Ami thoroughly tired out after very
Misfit exertion, it shows that your
IdiHul is Hijji ami impovished, ,:jnl me
action of your heart Is weak.
Take Smith's Compound Sarsapa
rilla it will purify, eurieh and vitalize
your blood, and pm your whole ey
•oh in a healthy condition.
SMITH’S
PHARMACY
A FULL LINE OF DOUGLAS
SHOES FOR MEN AT J. A. SMITH’#
To Old Point Comfort.
On August lath the Southern Rail
way will sell tickets to Old Point
Comfort ami Virginia Beach at sl3. oj
for the round trip.
Tickets will tie good returning until
September 3d.
O. 1,. CANDLER,
General Agent.
The X-Rays.
Recent experiments hy practical
tests am! examination with the ais
of tho X-Rays, establish It as a fac|
that Catarrh of tho stomach is not |
disease of itself, but that tt resulfv
from repeated attacks of Indigestion.
"How can 1 cure my indigestion?”
Koilol Dyspepsia Cure is curing thous
ands. It will cure you of indigestion
and dyspepsia, and prevfcflt or curt
catarrh of the stomach. Kodol d>-
gerts what you eat—makes the slot®
aeli sweet. Sold by Jtiurger** Ph*
many, Smith’- ’Pharmacy and W. A
BRIGHT’S
DISEASEand
DIABTES
Bloating, Gravel, Dull Backache, Blad
der Disease, Urlny Affections, Deep
Seated Cases Especially Cured By
Stuart's Gin and Buchu.
Stuart’s Gin and Buchu acts directly
on the bladder, the urethral tract and
the kidneys, driving out all the ob
structions and making a perfect cure
if the most aggravating, dangerous
uid deep sealed cases.
Graved symptoms—Burning sensa
tion in passing urine, frequent detdra
to urinate, the urine is thick and sed
imentary, the whole nervous system is
disordered, digestion impaired, sleep
disturbed, loss of strength and vigor,
Stuart’s Gin and Buchu will cure ev
ery symptom, disolve the gravel,
between the urine, bund up tue
uerves.
Mucous Discharges—Difficulty in
passing water, ulcerations, irretations
of the urethra, disagreeable odor of
the urine, pains in back, swollen ai
i.lcs and legs, catarrh of the bladder,
ire ali quickly aud permanently cured
by Stuart’s Gin aud Buchu.
Blight's Disease- Dry akin, short
neaii of breath, urine dark colored,
Tiie worm cases cured by Stuart’s
Gb* and buchu. l’leusanc to the taste.
1 liorou.Tily tested for past 20 year*
In private and hospital practice, with
a record of 896 cures of chronic kid
ney and bladder troubles—tlie kind
that bau resisted ali other treatment,
Druggists or by express, $1.90
j Rumple iiottio free by writing atm
| fir t Drug Go,, Atlanta, Ou. We have
sci aside !5,000 bottles for free dla
':|b"tion so ns to prove our claims,
so write at once.
Quiok Arrest.
J A. Qulledge, of Verbena, Ala.,
was twice in the hospital from a so.
I vi -'ro °aao <>f piles, causing 24 tumors,
i Arret- doctors ami all remedies failed,
iiuclUon'H Arnica Halve quickly ay.
rooted further Inamalltm and curod
mm It conquers aches ami hi tig
pain 25 raata at all druggists.
The Death Penalty.
A litllo thing sometimes results
ti (loath. Thus a mure scratch, iu
smuitiea :t cuts or puny boils have
aid the death puualty, It, Is wise
° have Huckliu's Arnica Halve
over handy. It's the best salve on
urtli and will prevent fatality, when
■tutus, Horns, Ulcers ami Piles threat
n. Only 25 cents at all drug stores,