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In Plumbng Materials,
Hardware, ; 'i'J*tt » -n •• ' Supplies, ■• ;’-;•> ' • *' • * *
_ Mill Paints
and
Oils, Guns, Cutlery, and Crockery.
We are the Leaders.
1 We Have some Excellent Bargains in Harness and Buggies
and will be Pleased to serve you.
Farmers Hardware Company.
vF w w
Barrow-Crowe.
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Barrow,
of Athens, Ga., have issued invi¬
tations to the marriage of their
daughter, Susie Childs, to Dr.
Samuel James Crowe on the eve¬
ning of Tuesday, the 30th. of June,
at 8:30 o’clock, at Emanuel
church, Athens, Ga.
The wedding will be of broad
social interest, as both young
people are widely known and pop¬
ular.
Miss Barrow is the eldest daugh¬
ter of Chancellor and Mrs. Bar
row, of the University of Georgia,
and is a young woman gifted and
charming. Dr. Crowe is one of
the most gifted of the younger
members of Georgia’s medical pro
fession and inherits the talents of
his father, who is one of Atlanta’s
most highly esteemed physicians.
Chills, Fever and Malaria sufferers
©an now obtain Wood’B Liver Medi¬
cine in liquid* form. Regulates the
liver, kidneys and bladder, relieves
biliousness, sick headache, consti¬
pation, fatigue and weakness. It’s
tonic effect on the entire system is;
felt with the first dose. Pleasant to
take. Clears the complexion quick¬
ly. $1.00 bottle contains 2 1-2 times
the quantity of the 50c 6ize—“Sold by
Consolidated Clothing and Drug Co.
T» Tim Pit.
We have bought the Meat
Market of Cannon & McClain
and will in future be known as
the Flint River Market, and
take this method of announcing
to the public. Mr. J. B. Thomas
will be in charge of the business
and is an experienced meat cut¬
ter and market man, and will be
glad to serve you.
We will collect for all meat
sold on credit every Monday of
each week. Please bear this in
mind.
THOMAS & HERRINGTON.
Tax Notice,
I will be at the following nam
ed places for the purpose of re¬
ceiving State and County Tax for
the year 1908.
Camilla every Saturday ex¬
cept May 30th on which I will
be in Pelham, and will be in Camilla
-court week. My books will close
.
June 20th. and all those having
failed to return will be doubled tax¬
ed.
G. T. AKRIDGE,
T. R. M. C.
Color Embroidery is Popu¬
lar.
This is to be a season of em¬
broidery, and when I say “em¬
broidery” I include everything
which can come under that head,
says a writer in the New Idea Wo¬
man’s Magazine for July. Braid¬
ing done with soutache, star, rick
r a c k coronation braid—darning
and couching Vith silk floss, cord
or a kind of fiat silk tape on the
popular filet net; in fact, any and
almost every kind of hand-work
is popular.
And variety is also obtained by
the very extensive use of colored
embroidery on both white and col¬
ored materials Last season it
was au fait to wear a blouse show¬
ing just a hint of delicate color
obtained for the most part by
means-of shadow embroidery, but
this year the most popular designs
for color embroidery are carried
out in satin-stitch, in Copenhagen
and Delft blues, reseda-green, co¬
ral pink, lilac or soft browns.
And very pretty many of these
new waists are, though the most
expensive models are, for the most
part, still worked in all white.
Have you seen the low cut shees
at Hand Trading Co. They are
snappy.
NOTICE.
Costs You Nothing to
come to Albany to Trade.
The Retail Merchants of Alba¬
ny will refund in cash the rail
road fare of any out of-town pa¬
tron from the territory named,
whose aggregate purchase among
any or all of them amounts to as
much as $25.(X? in any one day.
Gome To The Best Town In
South Georgia to Trade.
Territory: All points between
Thomasville and Albany and be¬
tween Boston, Moultrie and Al¬
bany. , 6-5-08-2 in o.
For
Ladles
Ills
J-22
Narrow Escape From
Drowning.
Mr. and Mrs. t . L. Turner and
their two youngest children had a
very narrow scape from drown¬
ing at the Big Fish Pond Thurs¬
day.
They had gone out with a party
of relatives and friends to spend
the day.
Mr. Turner, hie wife, their two
months old baby and Gilbert,
three years old, were in a buggy.
They mp ;ed the road and in at¬
tempting to cross a small body of
apparently shallop water the horse
and buggy suddenly dropped
into a hole ten feet deep.
Everything went under and the
four persons weite gashed out ol
the buggy. The horifP Bwam to
Mrs.
vainly struggled to reach laud.
The older boy grabbed his father
about the neck and clung on bo
desperately that Mr. Turner could
not swim to shore and did not
have the heart to throw him loose.
Twice they all sank and becoming
exhausted were making oi. y fee¬
ble struggles when Mr. John Tur¬
ner who was in a hack just be¬
hind the buggy reached them and
plunging into the water by almost
superhuman effort dragged them
all out.
When he had succeeded in get¬
ting the drowning ones to land he
was completely exhausted and
when Dr. Hill, who was one of the
fishing party, later arrived on the
scene five well nigh drowned per¬
sons were lying about the treach¬
erous pool.
The little fellows were minister¬
ed to quickly by their grandmoth¬
er, Mrs. Alfred and by Mrs. John
Pineules For the Kidneys, Bladder*
and Rheumatism.
RELIEVES
30 days’ guaranteed treatment or for money $1.00. refunded. Satisfaction BACK-ACHE
Sold by CONSOLIDATED CLOTHING & DRUG CO.
Great suffering is the lot of all women, who neglect the health of their wo¬
manly organs. No reason to do so, any more than to neglect a sore throat,
colic, or any other disease, that the right kind of medicine will [cure. Take
Wine of Cardui
for all your womanly ills. It can never do harm, and is certain to do good.
Mrs. SalUe H. Blair, of Johnson City, Tenn., writes: “1 had suffered from womanly troubles for sfc
teen months, and had four doctors, but they could not help me, until 1 began to take Wine of CarduL
Now I think I am about well.” At all reliable druggists, in $1.00 bottles. Try it
IliniTC HKlIr lie IJw A A 1 1 rrren r I IrK Write today for a free copy of valuable 6f-paye Illustrated Book for be Women. in plain If you sealed need envelope. Medtcai J
Advice, describe your symptoms, stating age, and reply will sent j
Turner and were soon all right. It
was a day or so before Mr. and
Mrs. Turner fully recovered.
It was a narrow escape from
what came near being one of the
most unusual and horrible acci¬
dents that ever happened in this
county.
A Grand Family Medicine.
“It gives me pleasure to speak a
good word for Electric Bitters,”
writes Mr. Frank Conlan of No. 436
Houston St., New York. “It’s a
grand family medicine for dyspepia
and liver complications; while for
lame back and weak kidneys it can¬
not be too highly recommended.”
Electric Bitters regulate the diges¬
tive functions, puriD :!«( blood, and
impart renewed vigor and vitality to
the weak and debilitated of both sex¬
es. Sold under guarantee at Hill &
King’s drug store, 50
Pelham Vs. Salt cit^
The Sale City boys
did not know that they were
ing up against one of the
est amateur teams in this
when they challenged the
base bail team for a game
While the boys from our
city play good ball, they are
match for the Pelham twirlers.
The score stood 18 to 6 against the
visitors. •
The Pelham team had Twitty
and Mize m the box, while the
visitors relied on Luckey and
Brown.
Pineules for the Kidneys, 30 days’
trial $1.00, Guaranteed. Pineulesact
directly on the Kidneys and bring
relief in the first dose to back-ache,
weak back, lame back, rheumatic
pains, kidney and bladder trouble.
They purify the blood and invigorate
the entire system—“Sold by Consoli¬
dated Clothing and Drug Co.
Things That Make Worry
Impossible.
Success Magazine.
Good, robust health is a great
enemy of worry. A good digestion,
a clear conscience, and souml
sleep kill a lot of worry.
Worry is but one phase of fear,
and always thrives best in abnor¬
mal conditions. It cannot get
much of a hold on a man with a
superb physique, a man who liveB
a clean, sane life. It thrives on
the weak—those of low vitality.
It is not a very difficult thing to
make worry impossible. MaDy
people make it impossible for most
kinds of disease to get a hold otu.
them because they have s u c &
strong disease-resisting force
Disease always attacks us at our
weak point,
Thg^ great desid eratum i s t.
keop one s physical “‘Mhenia!’, an
moral standards so high that dis¬
ease germs, the worry germ, the
anxious germ cannot gain a foot¬
ing in our brain. Our resisting,
power ought to be so great that it
would be impossible for our ene¬
mies to gain an entrance into the
brain or body.
To keep ourselves perfectly free
from our worry enemies, every¬
thing we do must be done sanely..
No matter how honest we may be
or how hard we try to get on, ill"
we are not sane in our eating, im<
our exercise, in our thinking, in *
our sleeping and living generally,. ,
we leave the door open to all sorter
of trouble. There are a thousand? J
enemies trying to find a door open -
by which they can gain entrance
into our system and attack us afe.
our vulnerable point.