The Miller County liberal. (Colquitt, Ga.) 1897-current, May 29, 1907, Image 4

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WOMEN SUFFEBI yfAl Many women buffer in silence and ■ ? \W drift along from bad to Worse, know- B w/ : ' \ \v\ ' n K well that they ought to have I ill ‘<o ! - ' ' \ \\\ immediate assietahce. g 111 I wJE£? <»• 111 "“■* U'auy women do you know I Pl ' ’- ■' ? 3tSS* -*» ’ wll ° are perfectly well and stnw.* E 111 I r , I The cause may be e»«ily traced to S Id ' / ll some feminine lierangement which S' u\ V / [ I l/l manifests itself in depression of B Wl V / I . Spirit*, reluctance to go anywhere I v\\ / Car - ■//// or d° anything, backache, dragging I z\'.\ \ / I-■•'?'•* / l/l icnsations, flatulency, nervousness, E 1 w\'w r^: ‘Y ,/// ) and •,leeplessneas> I \ V. V-x Z-( / These sytnptoinsare but warnings B that there is danger ahead, nnd tin- B rilX.-J—? heeded, rj urC of su/ieriug or a j MISS JULIE FLORENCE tVAt CH aerioiv; operation is the inevitable I oH jrsttlt rhe best remedy for all B these svmptoms is . S Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Cowpound made from nnto-.; root* .! b... x' .t , . * > 4 received ■C. nubs. No -dhm o>siL< me in the r ••mtry tons ine 1 • o ’’\ eju aiß l u r-HuihiK‘d’ i-bucement. No»■’herinedi- j ?r ; c . (,rd : if c,,res «< we v- = -. write-.--‘Lydia ■■ - I ' „i \ ll u ~ht u.H.ut it change in >nv <to! condition, built I / weir- ? . _ i ' "'■ ■'-iLle Con pound cures; F'emale Complaints, oiig me; P : :;t>laeeine:,t s , Inflammation and Ulcera / ' ■ . .. It invelmibl. to preparing for child-birth j , ' ,!! ‘ '■ ■■■’ ' t-t'-ous Prostration, Headache, ard in-.-ij,. ,fl, s the whole system. hi i f.iiihatn - Sb uding Invitation to Women g ?’ .. ! ’ ‘ ; ei'it>;jf aav loin of female weakness are invited tn I “ rue ws. ‘’mkhaui, at Lym„ Mftss. I!.-.- r. Ivie, is free, - . A Sun; Vacation n Your Kitchen ?,,>t ‘:'T this - > scnmer vi /Q M perature at 110. (-r ,W jK a New Perfection .... .... Wick Blue Flame Oil \( \| " VTI/ Stove and have a cool h J \ / \\ H kitchen. The (/ |l « I - NEW PEU CTKJN I I Wick Bfeg Flar. i Cook-Stove I |N produces a working flame ins anrly. Blue flame means highly H concentrated heat, no soot, no ();i ; always at a maintained M level, e...-:m;ng a uniform flame. Made in three sizes. Every stove warranted If not at your dealer’s write to our H nearest agency for descriptive circular. A. I I \ hold use. Made hr pyOof brass throughout and beautifully nickeled. Perfectly gg constructed; absolutely safe; unexcelled in light-giving power; an ornament to any room. Every lamp warranted. yfis STANDARD OIL COMPANY, g INCORPORATED «JS A little learning is a dangerous ! thing, hut a lot of ignorance is still ' more dangerous. FITS,Bt. Vitup'Dancw: Nervous Disea-vs i j manently cured by Dr h'liue’s Great Ne.- < Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatfi I Dr H. R. Kline, Ld.,98l Arrhßt., E'hila., Pa Fortune knocks once at a man’s ; door. Misfortune knocks often. Argo-Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo '■ Argo Argo Argo Argo. Genius is the ability to sell what 1 you have done for a good price. Hicns' 081 CAPUDINE « I IMMEDIATELY CVRM " a-B Vu headaches JT??* up COLONS ,N 0 TO 13 ttOVR3 1 ® Otl!e D<W® ? ■- ■> - ?-A •• B BASE BAU-SPAi OINO " O ii tcial Everywlaeze, $1.25 luich. lot Thirty Years Standard of the Worli. Ev-rylhin,: for the athlete. Uniforms nm ! •• pi'p Blent for ev»*ry athletic sp<m. Six new cafu <>: :e-» v rer lo any address, Free. COOKS YOU N£ED--10c. per copy. PosloaiJ. .-■> i, spa di.ig’s Official BtMe Bah Guide. IL .v re Hay Baseball. rl. w lo Bat. No. 2-Lj, How to Run Uaioi. >' -••jw (• Pitch. No Dow to Cate. l No 2? /low lu Hay First Ease. So. Z.'t-, How |<< Piny Second Rase. i£T How t< I't... Third Hase. N life, How to Plat Shortstop. N. -■«. How lo Hi, tap OtiHleld. No 2L Hoa lonnrpp,,. a j- ;k , ( . Ball Ix-Wie, M il age a Kun.’ i-ufi Club. Iruiu and •/•»«•«••’•• »» 'lVun and Umpire a Game. Send for new K.». .e ’ *y..-• . boys tspecisi-.y. Wall Orrier Dept. ... U, BPALDING & BROS., >26 Hast au St., Now York. us *•tt e gt-nateaaweny ne g c 1 STANDARD or THE SOVThlj sP "HOGLESS iL :! -> LARD -S !< r S COVEPNMENT- INSPECTION I ’ ■ Im'YWSffiAXNAH ATI ANTA NW<MJMNS| J Sfl3ra33 l 2sacE2£3fiiatfE£‘«a GG ‘ :i; ’* Telegraphy a ~ Spumin' rates Shorthand ) Bookkeeping p / MAIN LINE WIKES MLN > 1 TiIKOVQH BVJLBINU <NI -g.vga i THE SWISS FASJU THE KIXGOF ,F.J. MOW.’.G lit, iriXTFBEfTSB WIHWTO THE HiaiGH CO., Traej <;l<X T«.i». English Deep Mining. A clipping from an English pews paper, furnished by Consul E. B Walker, of Burslem, says that a seam of <-oal twenty-four feet thick has been reached at a depth of 580 yards I in South Staffordshire. It is estimated that with the new ! machinery installed it will be possi i bie to raise 3.200 tons per working I day of eight hours, an output which : it is claimed has never been reached from a single shaft, in the history ot mining. The work will be done by hydraulic lifts working subsidiary cages designed in a manner to eni body a combination of the best Eng Eh. American and German practices Electricity will be used not only foi lighting on the surface, but to some ■ extent in the* mines and for haulage purposes. Employment will be given ' t > 1,500 to 2,000 miners. The new coal ar-a 1 aid to cover 2,000 Lana of Youth. <u ; , ~. : 1 ti>i" ma. This I -t" literally true, b„ I mean ■■■'■ t in inter' . and activity. 1 rei I. ii. i middle western town five i in a sm/le block on whose pore-:-.-.- . n u.cient bearded men who gaz-J ot i 'iiiiig, were interested b m nothing, lid n .tiling. in Califoiid: t-.ia beards are there, but few, i i- • v iio sit in dreams. They are al w !•.. not driven to it by tli? grim f a want, but blithely, us young ir rejoicing that their race is not yet run. I recall at once a giant of 75 who still works and rides and plays with boyish relish. Life itself is oid nn-n a meat in Cali fornia and they - - pmasureo DR. TALKS OF FOOD I’rea. of Board of Health. What shall I eat?" is the daily i inquiry the physician is met with. I do not hesitate to say that in my Judgment, a largo percentage of dis use is caused by poorly selected and improperly prepared food. My per sonal experience with the fully-cooked food, known as Grapo-Nuts, enables ; me to speak freely of its merits. "From overwork, I suffered several years with malnutrition, palpitation ■ of the heart, and loss of sleep. Last summer I was led to experiment per sonally with the new food, which I used in conjunction with good rich cow's milk. In a short time after I commar.c. 1 its use, the disagreeable symptoms disappeared, my heart’s ac tion becams steady and normal, the • fractions of the stomach were prop erly carried out and I again slept as soundly and as well as in my youth. "I look upon Grape-Nuts as a per fect food, and no one can gainsay but that it has a most prominent place in a rational, scientific system of feed ing. rluy one who uses this food will soon be convinced of the soundness of the principle upon which it is manufactured and may thereby know I the facts as to its true worth.” Read, "The Road to Wellvine," in pkgs, i “Tuore’a a Reason.” I i i > 5 - -- H liy Hoads Are So Poor; Logan W. Page, director of thd Office nf Public*. ILoacis; Department of | Agriculture, recently submitted to a ■ Congressional committe a very inter . esting summary of thd work dond and some reasons for tire work done Iby that office; Among other things it is shown that the aggregate mile [ age of the public roads in the United i States is approximately 2,300,000, i' not including Alaska and the island . possessions. The total expenditures ! on these in 1904 approsimated $75,- i 000,000, of which about $15,000,000 ■ Or twenty per cent, was applied to I permanent road work, tn spite of , this great outlay only 6.5 per cent, of ' the roads are surfaced with stone, I gravel, or other hard material. It is : evident; therefore, that enormous . sums of money are annually wasted in the administration, construction and maintenance of roads< whereas the present outlay should, if properly applied; go far toward providing ade quate transportation facilities in the form of improved roads, which are so necessary to our comfort and pros perity. The United States is far behind I Europe in this character of internal ; improvement while excelling in most | stated as follows: tmp'-rfect btate I laws; inefficient mill improper admin istration nnd management of roads; j ignorance on the part of local road builders of the principles anti meth ods of road construction; ignorance’ of the qualities essential in road building materials and lack of facili ties for ascertaining such qualities; lack of sufficient research and experi mental work to devise changes or im provements in road materials or ex isting methods of construction suffi cient to meet peculiar conditions, re duce cost, or increase efficiency. The remedies which should logic ally come from the National Govern- ■ inent may be i—’-n- -•■o ,j a s " lews. , . ~ .. ml investigation, compari son and explanation of existing road laws in order to provide legislators with all possible data upon which to consider improvements in existing legislation. 2. Investigation of systems of road administration and management and dissemination of the knowledge thus acquired with a view to the elimina tion of the worst features and the adoption of the best features in all parts of the country. 3. Tim introduction of proper methods of construction by familiar izing local fond builders with the principles and practice essential to proper nad construction and main tenance. 4. Investigation of quantity, loca j tiou, accessibility and relative value j of road-making materials throughout the country and comparative tests to determine whether, or not such ma terials possess -the essential qualities. 5. Experimental research work on a. sufficiently large scale to cope with existing conditions and keep pace with the needs of the country i’> this All the remedies above suggested are of such character as would be capable of being realized to the full est extent only through the National Government. For the States to carry i on such work would involve a per-* ! sonuel, equipment and operating et j penses by each State almost as great as would be required of the National Government, with a great amount of duplication in methods and results, and much confusion owing to con flicting conclusions and recommenda tions. Furthermore, there is ample precedent for investigation and ex perimental work by the Government and much contemporary example of such governmental activity. That the work already done by the National Government along the lines indicated in the above-suggested rem edies has not produced greater results is due to the fact that the appropria tions have been small and the facili ties necessarily limited. For several years after the establishment of the office the appropriation remained in the neighborhood of SIO,OOO annual r' The results achieved by the Of fi,co 01 T '" -d R ftl -e much more than commensurate facllttlos provided by the appiopx,. . u . . Congress, and have followed th gen eral the procedure indicated in the remedies above stated.-— Washington Correspondence of The Automobile. New Roadbed Material. A new roadbed material is being experimented with in Europe which is economical, easily applied and very durable. It consists of a mixture of liquid tar and fine gravel. The gravel is first heated in a revolving drum ' and then the tar is allowed to mix with it in tlie revolving chamber. ! After this it is dumped out and :il , .owed to Stuiiu cor ! during which tipie a fermentation is said to take place and the tar is said to penetrate into the pores of the gravel very thoroughly. It is then scattered on the roadway and rolled down. In addition to the other merits claimed for it is the one that it is dustless. Cost of Hauling < rop-. . Inquiries conducted in over one thousand countnes of the United States by the Department of Agricul ! fare indicate that the average length : of haul of crops over county roads I is 12.1 miles, the average weight of I the load 2002 pounds and the aver i age cost per mile 25.2 cents, or about j $3 per load, the figures being based ' on cost of labor, feed, wear, etc. Tantalizing Man. “I see by the paper,'' said Mrs. ; Blinks at the breakfast ‘ that i a delegation of women suffragettes I is-coming to this country." Mr. Blinks said jiothing. "Apd they're going to invade i Washington and make a speech tc ; the President, and all." Blinks still silent. "1 declare,” snapped the lady. : “You’re the most tantalizing man in existence. There you sit like a statue never saying a word to show that you don't know what you're talking about”—Atlanta Constitution. &ULPHIR BRINGS HEALTH. Purifies the Mood and Clears Up the omplexiori. Everybody |eod» to take Sulphur at this gasoil. Nithing like it to purify tile blood; clear upy ie eoinplexioii and remove ‘■that tired feefeig/' But the only way to take it is :n liqf.i form. Hancock’s Liquid Sulphur taken j ternally is the best Spring tonic. Applie.lnternally Hancock’s Liquid Sulphur quiekl cures Eczema, Tetter, and all Skin Disuses. Hancock's, the only Liquid Sulpha Ointment, removes Pim ples, Blnekheals and Sores, and gives a beautiful soft, -elvety skin. Your druggist sells it. It cued Edward D. Herring, ui Frederick, Md. of a bad case of Eczema, nnd be write : fuee » as smooth as an infant’s. ** " All about-Suhhur Booklet fpce, if you Write Hancoeh Liquid Sulphur Co., Balti more. NOT MAD, EITHER. “You are beneath my contempt, sir." "So are yot beneath mine, nnd I’m piling on moie every minute.’ —Phl’l adelphia Ledifr. —-r-“ Every grocTy store should carry Argo Red Samon. If the salesmen have not yet called on you, drop a card to the Alaska Packers Associa where on" ary advertising officer are located. —— * ■ —-< COULD IF BE POSSIBLE? She—Don’; 'ou feel well, dear? He—My hc:j feels heavy. Do you suppose thos biscuits you made could have goto to my head?—Yonk ers Statesman A Lazy Liver May bo only a Bred lifer, or a starved liver. It wonk boa stupid as well as ■savage thing t< beat a weary or starved man because h, lagged In his work. So In treating thfpigging, torpid liver it is drastic drugs. V° lasb it with strong indication of a is . r b "‘ ’™ body whose are weary work. Start wUi the stomach uxad uin<. ( ] organs of digestion and nutrition. Put them in workag order and see how quickly your Ever will become active. Dr. Pierce’s Gdden Medical Discovery has made manyrnarvelous cures of ’’liver trouble” by its a nderful control of the organs of digestand nutrition. It re stores the normi activity of the stomach, increases the sc(-< ’ions of the blood-mak ing glands, cleaF< the system from poi sonous accumul tions, and so relieves the liver of the burens imposed upon it by ’ the defection ofither organs. If you have bitWOr bad taste in the morn ing, poor appetite, coated tongue, foul breath, cohstiated or irregular bowels, feel weak, easils B -d, frequent headaches, pain gnawing or disliked in stomach, perhaps nausea.Si^^rfr^okjr’’risings” in throat after eatir| and kinb(V*i symptoms of w« ak stomach fi d torpid l ivMfc no cine yvIH relieve j|u more promptly or.cure you! ffiinJ&octor _Piercey Goldyn Medical Ji-cojcry. Perhaps only a pail of the abov symptoms will be present at one time and ;et point to torpid liver or biliousness and eak stomach. Avoid all hot bread and bseuit-s. griddle cakes and other indigestible and take the ’’Golden Medical BUrovArji rugul*rlv and stick 1“ i*S The ’’Discovery” > non-secret, non-alco holic, is a lycerlc c tract of native medici nal roots th afu list of its Ingredients printed on ich hot®,* wrapper and attested under oat i.’ Its .hrre;l fonts are endorsed and extoll oy tlu n.<>st eminent medical writers of age £ii<i are recommended to cure the di s for V hieh it is advised. Don’t a* •;r wibstituto of unknown composition for his non-seerct medicine OF KNOWN COM’OSITION. It is to get a woman to think about saing her soul if she be lieves her hat h nor on straight. To improve the general health, take Gar field Tea daily fr a time; it purifies the blood, eradicate? rheumatism and many chronic ailments and keeps the health good! Garfield la is made of heil>s; it is guaranteed undmthe Pure Food and Drugs Law. Garfield Ta Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. It is might} hard to convince a man that the# is a hell if his life has been such as to make it certain he is going t ere. i BORAX IS NA ORE’S MINE (F PURITY FOR DAIRY UTENSILS. Borax is firt, a cleanser that re- | '“"wes dirt andgrease with surprising 1 ease; secouu, - « oweetc-ner that makes fragran any surface that has ’ grown musty r stale from neglect; ’ third, it is an ntiseptlc or destroyer of germs, it prevents the develop- | ment of bacteua or mouldy growths. ' With all this lis perfect}? f ree from j harm in its reultiug effects. i The farm c urn is kept free from that stale odj- It it is washed with borax in the hllowius proportions— : one tablespooFul ot borax to a quart of watei. The dairy ram has nothing about it but the plefcant aroma ot fresh milk and cream and sweet butter if it is kept clean with borax. There will bo no soapy sm li and no lurking hint of something g ne wrong. The cream c icks take on an extra freshness whei washed with borax and water in he nrO p Or _ Uo-o —<>no tanispcontul of bora., to I a quart ot watf. This preserves 4he fresh flavoi - of pe cream. The farm crlara separator can be kept thorough!' sweet and clean by a wash of borax fnd water in the fol lowing proportions—one tablespoon ful of borax toll quart of water. Be sure tha you get pure borax. To be sure, yq must get “20 Mule Team Borax.” If you are unable to get “20 Mule earn” brand send us your dealer’s 4*me and we will ar range to supphyou. Booklet free. Pacific Coast Borax Company, 100 William street, New York. ALL HE KX’EW ABOUT IT. Knicker —You can’t paint the Illy. Subbubs —'Nepr got a seed cata logue. did you?-New York Sun. I You fcok Prematurely Old I Because of those ugly, grUHy, gray hairg. Uea "LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER, Price, Si.CQ. retail, Needed His Horse Chestnut.- J. G. Simpson, who had been ar rested yesterday as an alleged book ' maker, tearfully begged Lieut. Wheel er, after he had been released for Want of evidence against him, to re turn a horse ciiesttiut which the lieu tenant had takcil front him. "Please let me have it,” h« pleaded. "I might just as well try to play the races without money as Without that horse chestnut. I can’t lose if I carry it." When it was restored to him he seemed mor| glad to get it back than he was to lain his discharge from custody. ; Simpson and W. G. Martin, a sailor on the cruiser Washington, at League Island, were arrested at Twelfth and Commerce streets. Simpson had a racing kook in his hand, in which he had made a record of a $5 bet on a horse running at the Bennings track. As the police had seen no exchange of money between the men, Magistrate Gallagher allowed Simpson to go with a warning.—Philadelphia Ledger. Worth the Price. An English jury has awarded $1,250 1 damages to a woman who before an accident could reach high C when she i sang, but after It, could get no fpr 1 ther than B flat. From this it would ' seem as if they thought the poor girl had been damaged. But this is doubt- I rm. As a general tiling reaching* high C is much like what Dr. John son said about a dog’s walking on his hind legs: "It is not done well, but you are surprised to find it done ! at all.!’ —Boston Herald. f DOMESTIC ORGANIZATION. “Every household should be organ- j Ized, the same as a business,” de- ! dared the serious-looking man. “Right you are. Ours is organ'zed . on the lines of the national House of j •Representatives." “How is that possible?” “My wife's ths speaker and I’m the , appropriation committee.” —Chicago Journal. 1 II'I ul.T!!IMI.WiliillllllMMIIH 'lillii liilillHlF'HW I Dr. Mozley’s Lemon Elixir is not a new and untried remedy. I 9I ~ More than 1-3 of a century attests its curative M • and health giving properties and serves to show iousness,’indigestion Sick Headache af 1 arising from ndaU»- f! Mozley’S torpid liver Being strictly a vegetable compound, it has no harmful effects. Its action is gentle but thorough— w cleansing the stomach and bowels of all impurities, B ZX al ’d toning up the entire system to a healthy condition ■ j S J 1 B —leaving the person feeling good, because every or- M “ w-z- *. a. gan is made to per f orm jf s p ar t perfect. . 50c and SI.OO at all drug stores. Mozley Lemon Elixir Co., Atlanta, Ga R ' 8 S jk S ? 736E. Ashley St., Jacksonville. Fla., April 22. 1907. ■ M M Zak. A A 1 have been using Dr. Mozley’s Lemon Elixir in my famUy for the past seventeen years: an-1 do not hesitate to say that I And nothing equal to it to' Indigestion, Sick Headache and Con stipatiun. I ch.ctfuily leoommend it to any who are in need of a Tonic and Liver Regulator. Mrs. JNO. H. GEE. I r*_- •• There are times when a very little is more than enough. ECZEMA COVERED BABY. Worst Case Doctors Ever Saw—Suf fered Untold Misery Perfect Cure by Cuticura Remedies. “My son, who is now Jnventy-two years of age, when four months old began to have eczema on his face, spreading quite rapidly until he was nearly covered. The eczema was something terrible, and the doctors said it was the worst case they ever saw. At times his whole body and face were covered, all but his feet. I used many kinds of patent medicines to no avail. At last 1 decided to try Cuticura, when iny boy was three years and four months old, hav ing had eczema all that time and suffering untold misery. 1 began to use all three of the Cuticura Remedies. He was better in two months; in six months he was.well. Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piermont, JJ. H., Oct. '24, 1905.” • TOO MUCH OF AN ADVANTAGE. “Why dcsl’t you invite Mrs. Spig ■ gins to your''.bridge whist parties? I understand she plays remarkably . "Yes,’’ answered Miss Cayenne. "She does play remarkably well. That is the reason we don’t want her."— j Washington Star. I Argo Red Salmon is standard in quality, quantity, color and price. NOT MARKED DOWN. i “I’d give a good deal for a fine I touring car.” ’ ■ Y<»r.i hrvo to.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. I’o be on go. ~ or. nuimiii nature, Be Well! Garfield Tea purities the blood, eradicates disease, regulates the digestive organs and brings Good Health! Manufac tured by Gariield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. X bold by druggists. And the bottom of a cup of joy is seldom far from the top. BACKACHE IS KIDNEYACHE. Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will Never Beturn. Only on® way to cure an aching back, cure the cause, the kidneys. dtrsjs. Thousands tell of cures made by Doan's 3 Kidney Pills. John C. Coleman, a prominent A merchant of Swains boro, Ga., says: “For several years my kid keys were affected, m y hack ached da y an<l nl ght. I was XrtftjWr I languid, nervous and latne in the morning. Doan’s Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief that followed has been permanent.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The force of dynamite is about eight times that of gunpowder. Nothing I Ate Agreed With Me. jjfc- I' 'fc. -4 S' MRS. LESORA BOOENHAMER. Mrs. Lenora Bodenhamer. R. F. D. 1, j Box 99, Kernersville, N. ('., writes: "I suffered with h’ohkicli troubL? and I indigestion for some time, nnd nothing that 1 ate agreed wt'- ■, ' was very inFa experienced a continual feeling of unra HtieHS u n l f ar. I took • medicine from the ductor, but it did me • " gowL ' /K 8 “ I found in one of your PenJ n a 'then a description of my symptoms? • ‘ wrote to Dr< Hartman f*» r ,,*Th‘ i t no k said I had catarrh of di . JS^d^ a n”" “y 1 - j w T!I 7 1 who are afflicted with ! therainn *nptoms will take Penina, as it ' i., ls .. .“(‘ainly enrrd »nr. ” The above is only one of hundreds who have written similar letters to Dr. Hart man. Just one such case as this entitles Peruna to the candid consideration of every one similarly afflicted. If this be true of the testimony of one person what ought to be the testimony of hundreds, ve* thousands, of honest, sincere people? Wp have in our files a great many other testimonials. I A BIG INDUCEMENT. "How much are these Easter lilies?” "A dollar each.” "Pretty sleep.” "Not when you consider that wt throw in the earth.”—Washington Herald. If you watch for the Items on Argo Red Salmon you will find some very interesting things about Alaska atw the Salmon industry, of which very little is known in this country. “Ar- ' go” is a household word wherever I this Salmon has been introduced. With some people trying to make both ends meet is an endless task. (YOU CAN KEEP DRY AND . , V hardest STORM DY WEARING z\' WATERPROOF (1/1 oiled M 1 rxf ] CLOTHINO //LK ' BLACK OR VCLLOW / J*' p Clean Light Durable [//Lj ’ I Cwarantoed Waterproof/' If j Low in Price VI / ' WRITE TODAY FOR FREE / / 1 BOOKLET O€SCRIBING MANY ( l<* V? 1 KINDS OF WATERRROOF g . k X CARMENTB K !• Sos IxX2|CtHILrDT4MUie » / V K r*ipr»c» AhiHe I ,J’ tonll , ur ' ) ,or , 45 * ear ? i lo ?* es no bad B **«•««» ballliS llk « quinine: pleasant to tsk«; children like 11, W- w AID seldom fails to make- permanent cure. % VOUR jg ,„ G “ a ™" tee j “ ni)!:r a:KI r ugs Act of lone xL chu l. a JBF HiaiHrial rßVfcr3 SO, 1906. At your druggists; or sent prepaid SD- ..JS! on receipt of price GUARANTEED Buggies, Runabouts and Surreys SHIPPED DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU I’KICK 840. A.t> Wholesale Prices We have vehicles . from 532.50 up We Guarantee Safe Delivery to Your Freight Station. TEN DAY FREE TRIAL OUR TWELVE MONTHS GUARANTEE COVERS EACH AND EVERY PART. It is to your advantage to investigate the merits of our vehicles before buying elsewhere, bend for our IWh, completely illustrated, Free Catalogue, which fully explains how we i A^vror f s“K*^ TO, ‘‘^ 0 ;7 n ‘ h ' , ;', rcb, i'^ 1 “ «■««. MALSBY, SHIPP & CO., Dept. B, I 41 S. FORSYTH ST., ATLANTA, fl*. CRESCENT ANTISEPTIC $$ GRCATEST HEALER KNOWN to science. ' - Non Poisonous, Non Irritating. Allays Inflammation and stop® (gSsa £ A pain from any cause. As strong as carbolic acid and as hannless as V/7 sweet milk. Cures burns instantly; cures old and chronic sores; Jl• ?-/cures sores and inflammation from any cause on man or beast. For fowls—cures cholera, sore head and roup. Satisfaction guaranteed. For Sale by all Dealers Mfgd. by CB RSCENT CIIEMKJA I. CO., Ft. Worth, T»xa» MALSBY COMPANY, «l S. VOKSITII ST., ATLANTA. GA.. Hancfaclurers of and Dealeri in 111 Hinds of MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES. r<<rfr*»>lc. Stadonnrs and Traction Engine*. Boiler*, daw .Milla nnd Grint Mills. W.»od-working and Hhla . gio Mill Machinery. Complete line carried In etook. J Write for catalogue price*. Address all cornrunnloa- Ch<na C<> Atinnla. Ga. Wo have no connection* la J n C-.nville. Via Boston’s Old Home Week July 28 to Aug. 3 • .o ways for Reduced fare on a J| urn trip to Boston a>* ’ «. -sool, College on«* Pq- . Fa,l ’l l .ynions, Historical P»griin cjSs,’ Military und Naval Demon . strations, Monster Parades, Electrical Displays, Races, Carnivals, Receptions, Free Exhibitions, Concerts and Enter- j tainments. A scries of mid-summer festivi ties such as no city in the world has ever offered its guests. Write to OLD HOME WEEK COMMIT TEE, BOSTON, MASS. . “ ‘Something Doing’ Every Minute for 7 Days ” Eyewater THE DAISY FLY KILLER uc.i ro,v« nil ib« ulus ant! affords comfort to every home -in dining room, _^rpfyjr’ , rwwg'.-f sleeping room a- 'I a!I pl Q COB t r > n b 1 e«<• mo. fcJDsSd ’ b "i. neat, and will not Hull or f X 9 '' -Jr / ItflC injure anything. gSft'.,,.',j Try them onco -■ ’’''ami you will nev a er bo without ' n ' them. If not kept J *’ v 'testers, sent prepaid for 20c. HAROLD *OMERB. HO DcF.alb Ate., Brwklyß, N. Y. mills LATH AND SHINGLE SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, At T^ STA WOOD, IRON AND STEEL ALL KINDS OF BELTING AND MILL SUPPLIES Lombard Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works & Supply Store* AUGUSTA, GA. 20 Mule Ji c ; BORAX will prevent peita when sprinkled about in pans and when applied to open drains, cesspools or alnkfti KILLS all (.emm and wards off disease. All Deal ers. 5-10-150. Booklet Free. Sample, sc. PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO., New York. (At22-’O7)