The Miller County liberal. (Colquitt, Ga.) 1897-current, January 30, 1907, Image 4

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MAYOR OF SUNRLIRY Says Pe-ru-na Is a Good Medicine. lion. C. C Brooks. Mayor of Runbury# Ohio, also Attorney for Farmers' Bank and Sunbury Building and Loan Co., writes ,fT have the utmost confidence in the vTtue oi Peruna. It is a great medicine. 1 have used it and I have known ninny ! p;v friends who !, ve obtained bene v-u’ti from its use. I cannot j . "a . * Pcru na ton htghl ij. 1 V. v' • - - (, ” M % ; ~4K .. "■ vd ***£&;;£• . ■ ■ ■ ■ iaaMspa'^aK i which re s he (lire* t result of the i his is morv *.. :e of the excessive heat < summer an>l the intense cold of win but is partly rue of all seasons of ■* * a cold or a cough, cat .rrh ot t lk* >•••■'• , 1 complaint, whether the lh direct. . the kidneys, the or u.se u 1? e to be the same The weai.* ' deranges the mu suit is some functional disease. Peruna has heroine a h ziiour-nndH of homes for- mtn r aii wents of th is sort. Ash' Four Druggist for Free Peruna Al.'Utnac For 1907. \ jronevally takes a soft man to ' himself. FIT * st. r itu:» Dance: N* rvou> D : senses p r » itlyci edbyDr. KJ&ie’* Oreat Nerve Rh* • T -*»r FZ trial bottle arm tr»*tise fn*e. L. H. H Kune, Ld..931 Arch St., Phila., Fa ''i! few people appreciate the ro * u i »i they encounter the thorn. To Cure n Cold in Ore Pay Take Lr.:c-i ive Brorao Old one Tablet* t. refund money if it fails to cure. E. V <4 row's signs tore i* on (■ »ch box. £si. Yearnings to be Clean. Oh for a Chinese laundry man! Can’t somebody, send Milton h “Ring Lee,” a “Wait Chung Tang, or ome - .eh Celestial creature who wants to make a barrel of money doing our ami dry work? One of the most cry ing needs in Milton now is some one - handle “Washoe” in an up-to dat 1 if some enterprising citizen : .nt in a laundry here, or if m Chinaman would go into the. - . m would keep In our town MMKy that now goes out and *f»n* - MiUon ■.a. ! hi-" I 3HEU*ATIS« f ST I OIL f * _ h< Proved Remedy *J* soi Over 30 Years. X Pr- 5r and 30c *-* I mmslls . ! !0 SHINGLE MACHINES AND SUPPL E3, ST«:mM AND SOLI N € r NG "■ r.s ;.* LO HBARD, Ar gi STA fr? fe uk2 Os Tilt* Result s| F\ I I ? T yof liberai*y uping our feral!- B a is to pay oil a raortKvge jj lod tho old farm Read .b ;• „oi- w 1 J lowing from Messrs. Wherry R I gap a,owners c the Magnolia 9 l\ £ Frhi Harm, Durant, 'lisa.: | jt J{ ” V o made S9OC from :>r> - acre a /g -rawoerriea. on which your R .. - fertilise n were used. Eight 9 1 years ago we bought tii is piece R •£3ST ut thd per acre, Tt vas then $ 3F r > -a considered to have been worn ga h out twenty years before, but H rm/. u^ing VirghiieCaroiina Fertilizer* under peas anc velvet beaus. , « we can* ;w arrow almost any £ thing and have been offered % for the place. We i* ca *jerunoated with a great. m many brands of fertilizers, 5 but find the highest per-cont. 9 cheaper.” No w don’t you think B S Virginia-Carolina EertlHzers woi ! J enable you to pay off a w~\ 8 rror gnge if you had one? ( g Well, don’t use any other. g VGglcia-Uirol:nttChernica!Co.e Richmond. Va. J&R vj §1 Norfolk, Va. g Durham N. 0. Vqs *Y » Charleston, 8. C. »98P W Baltimore, ifd. Rigg* A Atlanta, Go. ggyj s Savannah, Ga. Igg la Montgomery, Ala. raSl 3 Memphis, Tenn. Ufa! I Shreveport, La. TW N ! WHAT FARMERS DID Epitome of Work of National Union at Atlanta. GREAT MEETING CLOSES Wind-Up Session Was One of Un bounded Enthusiasm—Resolutions ard Suggestions of Paramount Interest Were Adopted. After what has been unanimously inscribed as the most enthusiastic and ii .portent mee ing in its history, ti:- ; I uion adjourned at Al intisrad;- neon am.d songs and t .ngiit uia ; ' .r; spei' l hos a..d general fs> od leeling Action taken by ibe convention can j j he summed up in the following re- ■ sunte of the three nays' s. ssior.. An . epitome of the i;:vk- nipo tunt reso lutions is as follows; That -he s;'P" business agents be i i .(utved to ns e annually anu for- | m date j.lans to that end. The suhst.tnc' *f the report of the I committee on c (ton crop is, that the next national union fix the minimum j price by grades taking middling as I , .. if* - haviir erivun due com- j . .<lei.iiton o ti >• acreage, ihe supply j i new material and manufactured j goods on hand and the demand for j ■ d goods. That the establishment of j u t,u w arehouses he encouraged by j he union throughout Lite cotton belt; said wareho.ua . to he incorporated tiider the laws of the several states. The report ot the committee on ect i a n schools advopates the establish i htent of (ottou schools in every state in the cotton states, each state to have a '-ate school, but all states to h..>»• i uui f orm grade. The committee on market recom- | : mends * . factories he established j . and owned by i_arm r; the mau ; ufacti ■ of cerfaln a.- ' s by I ; the a■'-.vr. This applies panic..!.., • to i ibe nimiti eon ed icalion stressed I the impcnance of urging better edu cational fuillities in the rural schools throughout the south. I he commiitee on fertilizer recom mended that nu union man buy or u.-' tae fertilizers or any manufactur ers r dealers who refuses to recog nize union agenis and sell to them at «uim price and terms as other agents. Hv Campbell Russell: That it is the ! cense ot this convention that all poli ; tieians and others not familiar with ; the needs of agriculture who may be I tendered appointments as trustees uv ! etlicr ottieial positions ir. connection | with any agricultural school or col ; itbe asked to show their patriot- J j ism by refusing to aocept such pcsi- I 1 liens for which they are manifestly : ! unfitted. j The report, of the committee on a?- I , .ir.-.jileut or a majority of these state , J institutions, and recommends that > | they shall he placed under the diree -1 non of the board of public institu ! lions, that the trustees and oo.irds of • ! directors sliali he farmers. The committee on warehouses after ‘ ! udvecating the establishment of bond > i. ■ warehouses i econnhends the adop . i, a ot st.mc feasible plan of selling ’ . ' n direct ' o tin,, spinn, rs and that > t'li- ovgnni -ation a.- soo,i as possible : 1 1 . stiiiP'- 'ie 1 for the purpose of ' ; financin'.- ; ■. ! protecting of cotton in 1 i the Farm. :■ ' i ni> n warehouses. The e< ii'.ii nice on diversified crops ; ! calls upon all farmers' Union mein- j ; her.', to diversify their crops and there i by refrain from living out of "paper j j That a conference of the spinners J j of the east, and the Farmers’ Union | • be held in May in the city of Binning ! ham or other convenient city in the ! south. Ihe committee on eo-opration rec oramei ds iha the Farmers' Union co i operate with the wool growers and other co-operators of the north and ! west in the establishment of a co-op ; ' rative woolen mill at any suitable ! point; that the Farmers’ Union will lid oi the capitalization of the same I ar.d patronage of the same. By the committee on legislation : Resolved, That parcels post system i hould be establiu’.ed and as a bill : will be presented to congress to that end, we hereby urge each local coun ty and state union to send petitions i to theii respective senators and rep 1. . entaiiv’s to urge the enactment of ' a parcels post law. | Hon Thomn v ’ o organizer for the! j Union FORAKER TO ACT aAWYER For Negro Soldiers in investigation of the Brownsville Case. Testimony co'icer..ing the affray at Brownsville, i exits. >■ U bo taken t>> i lie senate commit toe on military af i tail’s beginning Fcbr i.-ry 4 The- lull i ;cmmittee >iM oit at that time in . achingion. bubpoer. •;< win be issued p. once Senatoi ror.'.i.-’i will conduct I ihs case lor ih.; discharged soldiers. TEDDY MAY REVISE ORDER And Negro Troops Be Given Chanc* to Re-Enlist in the Service. It is rumored iti Washington that j the president is preparing to recede j from his position in regard to the I discharge of the negro battalion so ! far as it int Hots a penalty upon them i snd prevents their re-enlisting, i The men will stand discharged, but the penalty will be removed. Still >* will be incumbent upon en ' „ ~,,ii«r ! to prove his SHONTS HAS RESIGNED. Head of Canal Commission Voluntarily Quits Job to Engage in Other Business. , v / The resignation of Theodore P. Shonts as chairman of the isthmian canal dummission was announced at -he white house Wednesday, having been tendeied to the president and accepted by him, according to corre i pondence made public. It will taka ef fect not later than March 4. Mr. Shunts having just been elected as liesiitent of the Interborough Metro politan company, which controls the Rapid Transit and many surface lines in New York. Nij announcement was made as to who will succeed Mr. Bhonts'as chair man of the commission, but it w-as learned authoritatively that headquar ters would lie removed from Washing- I ton to Panama and a high-salaried chairman to serve in that capacity alone will not be named. This being admitted, it follows mat John F. Ste- vens, the engineer in charge of the ! construction, of the canal, would not j be made subordinate to another of j tidal on the isthmus. Without definite ; announcement, therefore, it is regard ! ud as a certlinty that Mr. Stevens j will be named as chairman of the j commission and will assume his du ' lies as ich in connection wiu» bis j post of chief engineer, i Mr. Shouts' retirement does not \ come wholly as a surprise. It has I been i umored persistently as soon as i action had been taken upon the prop ; owition to build the canal by contract dial Mr. Shouts would sever his con nection and resume a. calling more congenial to his taste. (Secretary Taft of the war department confirmed the rumc-r by saving that Mr. Shouts' resig nation was voluntary, which fact is 1 orne out by the letter of the presi dent accepting it. HARRY THAW TRIAL BEGUN. I Rotten Murder Case in New York Now I Has the Boards. n,. i vial of Harry Ke.nlull Thaw. I mill) -no;i form,. murder .»f Stan j ford tYhite, architect, at the Madison Square Roof Garden she evening of June 25, 1906, began in New York on \\ eduesday morning. The examination of talesmen did n:t fully develop the line of defense, I though thftrc were allusions in the questions of. the prosecution both as to the law <te it relates to the sanity of an accused person and to the “un written law" of wihich so much has been said and written since the trag edy was enacted. During the examination of the first talesman. Thaw's counsel objected to the form of questions as propounded by the district attorney as to insanity i or the unwritten law, but they told j the court they did not. object to th* I questions in principle, j Scenes approaching absolute dis ! order attended the opening of th». Most of the clashes were between reporters and correspondents and the police. Os the newspaper men there were perhaps 20j and there was a policeman for each. The great squad : of blue coats was commanded by a I police inspector. Only about fifty news paper writers finally were admitted, j the remainder of space in ihe court j room being reserved for the 200 tales men summoned on the special jury panel. The trial began before Justice Fitz ! gerald of the supreme court. AT VARDAMAN'S HOME TOWN. Mob Lynches Negro in Close Proxim ity to Governor's Residence. Information reported in Jackson, ; Miss., Wednesday evening was that j a negro named Henry Bell was lynch- I t ' Greenwood. home of Gover ■ nor Vardanian, Tuesday night, by un known parties. The negro assaulted Mrs. Graves of that place some months ago, and had been in the Greenville jail for safekeeping. Tuesday night h e arrived at Green | wood in charge of a deputy sheriff, | and while that official was taking him ! from the train to the jail he was sur rounded by fifty men, who took him away and strung him 1o a railroad bridge. The coroner s jury returned a verdict that the negro came to his death at the hands of unknown par- • ties. Agricultural Appropriation Bill. Representative Wadsworth of New York from the committee on agricul ture reported the agricultural 'ppro priatimi bt" to -he a. «ec Wednesday, j The bill carries $7,635,790 for the or ' dinary and regular routine work of j the agricultural department. KINGSTON PEOPLE KICK. On Action of Swettenham and May Demand His Recall. The publication in the Daily Tele graph (Kingston) of Governor Swet tenham'x tetter to Rear Admiral Da vis has greatly intensified the resent ment of the residents against the gov ernor for rebuffing the tenders of American assistance, and there is a movement on foot lo demand the re call Os the governor. TIED WIFE IN A CHAIR And When He Returned With Doctor She Was Dead. Mrs. Cris Young, an aged worn- 'i, died suddenly at her home near Daw r nville, Ga. She became sick and her h"sban£, fearing she might fall ot tier chair while he went for j assistance, lied her to the chair. When ' fce got back she was dead. GTORS MISTAKES A V Id often to bo buried six feet under B n ' S But many times women call on thei t mily physicians, suffering, as they Intag cne from dyspepsia, another from heart Rsease, another from liver or kid ney d ien ije, another from nervous pros tratioi, another with pain here and there, an d. i I tips way they present alike to them-1 yns and their easy-going or over busy < ictor, separate diseases, for which ho, as qni n g them to oe such, prescribes his pi j and potions. In reality, they nro all oni .ymptoms caused by some uterine diseasf j The'jftvkslcian, xporant of the cuvse < J suffering, keeps upTHatreatment untii-k hills are made. I'LjNujjerinfi patient lg,.( S n o betteiSjiMraist>a3Mbe ''Tern? foatment. but probably wors«r &escF have * Treiv removed ihe. disease, there by dis, TngTTi those aistressing symp toms, a ( instituting comfort instead of Proioff i ! misery, ft has been well said, that' a 1 case known is half cured.” Dr. t I , f .’ S Favorite Prescription is a scientn f icdldne, carefully devised by an ex T I need and skillful physician, and aoa I.y i 0 woman’s delicate system. It is ma< I 3 f na tive American medicinal roots ir is perfectly harmless in Its svfirn ~( 'TTit/c(■'”l 1,7 jnc iaiiive AS a i irful invigorating tonic "Fa voritell ■ rlption” imparts strength to the who. ’atera and to the organs dis tinctly 1< ~nine in particular. For over worked. Sworn-out,” run-down.” debili tated t ..qers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstrt "sb- p-girls.” house-keepers, nursing n jiers< and feeble women gen erally, Dt Pierce’s Favorito Prescription l!i 1 , , gr 'ttest (arthly boon, being tin .cqualed a ! an appetizing cordial and re storative t'ojp As a sex h(ng and strengthening nerv ine "1 ayo q. Prescription” is unequaled and is 11^livable in allaying and sub duing ner 3US excitability, irritability, nervous < a astion, nervous prostration, netus yivsteria, spasms, St. Vitus’s dance, at , , t | ier distressing, nervous symptom). |,,nimonly attendant upon functional I j organic disease of the uterus. I J | uces refreshing sleep and relieves m « ,! anxiety and despondency. ~ l' r - ” ipr fs Pieasant Pellets invigorate the stoma I liver and bow-els. One to three ad( 1 Easy to take as candy. A new- ipom and a straight flush make a cl* j sweep. » Plies lrp ,i j,, (j to Day*. Pazo Ointm , j s guaranteed to cure any case of Itcliir allinil, Bleeding or Protruding Piles mil toP, vf or money refunded. 50c. A nianMpt necessarily absent minded bejf misplaces his con fidence. 1 Hfiflrt Little Child 1 sS? carries with It the possibilities of great happiness, Into the heart of a IS a childless home. Women who wish for children, should understand *ij* that sterility Is not so much of a disease, as a symptom of female gi f 11 weakness, and, that in 90 cases out of 100, when the female weak- B I I °' on ß*^ or visit ot the stork comes. Dr. J. J. Livingston, of Freeman Ind., m >: t-nT?rmT*-»'---rrr- in mishaps. She took 6 bottles and vas soon made the happy mother of a veil-grown ||| ffirlT ..f, puj-jfE'T boy, who Is still living and doing well. 1 think that Wine of Cardui Is the sole cause vmi * 1 of her being able to have this child.” Whatever may be the form of your female EH st.£ te ylr C °S en "Z 8 treuWi or weakness, try Cardui. It is a reUable remedy for all the diseases pecuHar g ti ' FRSK i DCS, in plain sealed envelope, and a vaP | ;0 Komen. uable 6< -pa Hook on “Home Treatment for Women.” U ChattaniOgiedldne Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. j AT ALL DRUGGISTS IN SI.OO BOTTLES | TREATMEL OF TRAMPS. Bacon—The pce are very conskl- ! erate of a poor ptneless tramp in | New York. Egbert—How so Bacon—Why, wn one goes to sleep on a park hch the cop rapt \ hint up.—Yonkc,-statesman. AWFUL A'l A'iS OF FAIN*. A Most Dread! Base <>f Kidney Trouble and h st ,vas v " Thomas N. Ate Hough, 321 South Weber St , Go’, o Springs, Colo., i ays: “For twelve i tir fifteen years 1 ,-as suffering fre- j 5 Auent at“fe.cks of j ain in the back i pc kidneys that . acted for three ! weeks at a time. ’ would be unkble |:o turn in bed. * The urine was in a terrible conditi , at times a com plete stoppage C'Urring. I began with Doan’s Kidry Pills, and soon felt better. Keepig on, l found com plete freedom frm kidney trouble. The cure has beemermanent 1 ows my good health o Doan’s Kidney Pills.” Sold by all deal*a. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn ,'Z: ’ Estimates of the tountry’s copper production this yearplace the output at between 940,00,000 and 970,- 000,000 pounds. Lat year's produc tion was 901,000,00 pounds. There is more Catarn in this section of the country than all f tier diseases put to gether. and until the lat few years was sup posed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors proncuncd it a local disease and prescribed local venedies, and by con stantly failing to cure wth local treatment. pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constifctionrt disease, and therefore requires consitutiona. treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, mmufactured ny F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, (tio, is the only con stitutional cure on them rket. It is taken in ternally in dosea from 1( drops to a teaspoon ful. It acts directly on tie blood and mucous surfaces of the system, hey offer one hun dred dollars for any case t fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimotiala. Addresa r. J. Chensy & Co., Toledo,f. Sold by Druggists. 73c. Take Hall's Family Pits for constipation. The sea-level ce al from Mar seilles to the Rhom River is to be completed in seven /ears at a cost of *13,730,000. - You Look Prematurely Oldll leoauee of trios e ugly, grizzly, gray heir*. Ue* *’ tA CREOLS " H AIR RES^HER . Price. to.OO, re'atl. IIMB ™ REST CURE. Bill—Any piece of machinery is helped by resting. Jill—Yes; I’ve always noticed that iny watch goes better after I’ve got t out of hook. —Yonkerp Statesman. PHILIPPINE “DOBIE ITCH.” Itching Pimples Covered Body—. Di scharged For Disability—Found Cure in Cuticura Remedies. "I enlisted in the Corps of Engineers as a telegraph operator, and, while stationed in the Philippines, I became subject to the 'Dobie Itch,’ as the natives eall it. In this disease small, white, itching pimples j form under the skin, generally between the ! toes, on the limbs, between the fingers I and under the arms. I never knew of a I case originating outside the Philippine i Islands, but have known of many cases ! where it has returned in this country and | invariably at the same time of the year | as the original attack. The cause, so far j as I could learn, was some tropical parasite ; or germ peculiar to that region. "I got so bad that I was confined to my j quarters a week at a time The Army j Surgeons applied some carbolic solution, | and it would disappear for a time, when it | would break out again. I was discharged j i from the Engineers by reason of disability i contracted in line of duty, and when I ] had the trouble again, my druggist, Mr. i Z ,of Brooklyn, recommended Cuticura Remedies The immediate relief was mani fes* with my first purchase, and the i 'malady quickly yielded to the Cuticura Remedies It has never recurred or both ; ered me since I began to use and continued ; to use the Cuticura Remedies. Y'ou may quote me as a believer in Cuticura Rem j ed’ps from personal experience. John ,S. j j Woods. 221 Sands St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ] Oct. 21 and 26, 1906.”' The bn',loon has one great meri^ ' over the automobile. It never runs | over Innocent pedestrians. | H. 11. Green's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the j world. See their liberal offer in advertlse j ment in another column of this paper. The woman who sCoopS to marry | seldom has time to straighten tip j again. j - -1 HOC TM VS nn’O Cherokee •Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein StSTiV’E?} DOE IHiLuRO Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe ?“ SSWtSSjf Son\e people’s goodness is probably | due to the fact that they are never j found out. WORI D’S WONDKR COTTON A n«w first sold la?t spring ; was planted by 100 different farmers; has pro- j duced from 2to bales per aero; highly pro lific ; big boll, small seed, good staple; E. Humphreys. Godwin A Co., Memphis,Tenn. The only time you can afford to get t aw?rv in when you haven’t anything ] a Jot! t j ClO. Invigorate the Digestion. To invigorate the digestion and stimu late the torpid liver and bowels there's nothing 60 good as that old family remedy, lirandreth’s Pills, which has been in use i for over a century. They clfeanse the blood and impart new viaor to the body. One or two every night for a week will usually I be .'ll! that i 6 required. For Constipation or Dyspepsia, one or two taken every night will in a short time afford great re- Brandreth's Pills are the same fine lax ative tonic pill your ffrandparents used and being purely vegetable are adapted to every system. Sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or suffar-ooated. Even failure may sometimes be spoiled by success. Itch cured in 30 minutes bv Woolford’s Sanitarv Lotion : never fails. Sold by Dnig gists. Mail order* pnmptlv fi led hv Dr. jr • Mpti.Co.,CYawfordsviile,lnd. sl. j . ail men saiLra suffer most from rheu tnu^ußn. NATURE PROVIDES < SlSllS§ l i > FOR SICK WOMEN (ms a more potent remedy in the roots •- and herbs of the field than waa evet 4 / -y ? j produced from drugs. 1 In the good old-fashioned days of ■ A *i»p- * W our grandmothers few drugs were A V A wr- : ;/ / L used in medicines and Lydia E. f .V/ • ] Pinkham. of Lynn. Mans., in her \ l\\ ‘ -wIC ’ 111 study of roots and herbs and their \\ \ // power over disease discovered and \l kAk / / gave to the women of the world a /~J lAX 3) / ~ N remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. LYDIA E. PINKHAM Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its record of more than thirty years, its lopg list of actual ouresof those serious ilia peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinlcham’s Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache, flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there Is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. I’ink ham’s Vegetable Compound. N» other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the l nited States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable compound and what it lias done for them. Mrs Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lvdia E. Pink ham and as her assistant for years before her decease advised under her UP Cabbage Plants! J’l? ,10 JT to 811 order* fer m» Celebrated I CABB\GE PLANTS in any quantity detured. EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD—EarIiest and best j rure header, funall type. CHARLESTON WAKEFIELD—About ten days later : than Early Jersey’s, also a sure header of flue size. Tricos f. o. b. here, packe 1 in light hex*»: 500 for *I.OO. 1,00 V to *,OO > SI. 5,00) to 10,000 »t *1 ,T» per Os Rpociil price* on larger Tintiti ss. \'! ►.'l-jr™ ohi i lf3. O. I). whin not aaoam >onie Iby rctmittanoe. CHAS. m. CISSOfy, Young’s Island, S. C. HIS OPINION. She (after a quarrel).—l wouldn’t ! cry for the best man living, so there! , He —You don’t have to cry tor him, dear; you’ve got him. ; Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums.reducesinflamma tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25ca bottle Every time a girl is crossed in love she imagines that her heart is broken, I but it only gets a very small dent. iiiili CAFUDINC ■ '"AwSy’ \ IMMEDIATELY CUA.ES Jl4^ H£APACHE9 toil. 10l 41 OraUM a Dropsy i Remove* all swelV v,, « »i» fitocc days: effec ts a permanctn Cure in 30 lo 60 days. Trial treatment i given free. Nothingeau be fairer i Write Dr. 11. H. Green’s Sons, Specialists. Box b AtiarHa. Gr Carolina Cement Co. ATLANTA, CHARLESTON, BIRMINGHAM, NEW ORLEANS. LIME, CEMENT. ETC. Land PlftNtter SsiprJant* Fertilizer. See Catalog. *«Mr mm Como isphilt roofixg, ! L 2 and 3 ply, for B«rn«. Reeidencen. WarelioaaM. j j Better. Cheaper than Shingle* and other Roofing. I Samples, prices, address DEPT. C. I CABBAGE Plants, CELERY Plants and aII kindsof garden plants. Can tiow furnish all kinds of cat bage plants, grown in the opeu nti* and wUI sta»<l great cold, crown from jjmrWt *el the most reliable seedsmen. We nan the sums plants on IbmK H '%€•> - thousand acre truck farm. Plants carefudv counted and properly I tilt [;• * Wa| packed. C derj ready last < f Dec. Lettuce, ui son aud Beet plants, same iiji tjE> tin eor earlier ltedt c«d express rates piomlsed.whlt b.whri> effective 'M , s*l '■£w ill giTe u* «) per cent lew than meTvhsr.dl.'e rates Prices Small .ots |■ ALSO per thousand large lot #l.W> to f 1.25 per thtusand. F. O B. Meg ~ —gens.S. L. A rllngt* n white ir pine Cucumber Med 6u cents ier pcumi. fn-i- .70m . . „ , *■. u. b. J c^gttts, S.C. The United states Agricultural Dej artiront has established an| Ex reritnenta! station on our farm a to test ail kinds of vegeta hies, espe cially Cabbages. Ihe results cf these experiments we will be pleaded to give you &i an- time. 1 ours lespectfully N H KLITCH COM PAN Y.*M CGGETT3, S. C. | SUCCESSION-Best known snre heading rartety of large flat cabbage, later than Charleston Wakefield. . These plants are from the very beet tented deeds and grown in the open air and will stand severe cold with out injury. All orders aro filled from the same bed* I that Inm nsing for my extensive cabbage farms. Bat ! isfacticn guaranteed. Avery & Company SCCCKBSORB TO AVERY & MciVULLAN, Al-OS Soulh Forsytti Bt., Atlanta. Ga. -ALL KINDS OF— MACHINERY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all Sizes. Wheat Separators. BEST ISIPROVED SAW KILL ON BANTS. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, Circular Saws. Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Engines A Mill Supplies, Send for free Catalogue. | Hogless Lard | H None anywhere near so p H good, so pure, so eco- |3 H nomical, so satisfactory. g| U. S. Government Inspected, g &Qg3Bg3gSiegSggSg%g BS3^g-aHB (Ats-'O7)