Newspaper Page Text
HELPFUL
ADVICE
. tit m f'i 11> AuOm—aißhJMf
Wf
ir jails
dwmß
• i>ur family doctor [
■out your private I
too modest. You j
. :.l to tell Mrs. link- I
. •. the things you I
xylai;: to the doctor. Your ;
.■ In hi in the strictest con- 1
i’rorn her vast correspond- 1
■■ th ii' lc women during the :
. thirty years she may have I
.. -d the very knowledge that will ■
..ciy, oiir< ,ise. Sm-h letters as the fol- i
L ■■■•■’">% from grateful women. e«- !
taulish beyond ; ion! t the y wcrof .
’■-..YOIAE. PINKHAM’S
. COMPOUND
r-.-r all female diseases. .
- V .ii.iii R. IJarndt, of Allen-
l'v«r sii. I was ixtecn years of
I h.i<; >..fli-ivt] frtun an organic de- I
•p and ftm.-'le weakness; in I
• 1 acuct I had dreadful headaches
■ n • v remedy nervous. My physi- ,
• a’d I .ust go through an opera- ;
’ . a to gel well. A friend told me ■
!•- Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable j
->nnd, and I took it and wrote you |
> v, following your directions I
c rGilly, and thanks to you I am to- I
• v a v 11 w. inan, and I am telling |
il mj’ friends of iny experience.”
FACTS FOR SICK
For thirty vent l.ydia E. Pink-
'Vegetal <Oin]xiund, made !
front rci!' :j>i herbs, has 1. cn the
standard remedy for female ills, .
: nd has positively cured thousands of i
wonien who I'.ave r.vn t roubled with
di •plarvnK nts, i- tlaiumation, ulcera- :
ii;>n. til.mid Illinois, irregularities, '
periodic pains, backache, that Lenr- ■
ing-dm feeling, flatulency,indiges
' ion,diz/ ness,ornervousprostration.
CAPUDTmf
-■ewx S £■" b removoß the cenae.
» - S R I*-*' eaothoe the nerves and
relieve? the aches and
COLDS AND
headache* and Neuralgia also. No bad
«C«cta. 10c. 25© and 50© bottle*. (LIQUIF 2
A icatioiK- are a good deal like mar
riage—anticipation often beats the re- I
alization.
How to Mid- • Ve.nr Milch Cows More
Write I a iile Coast Borax Co.. New i
York City, to- “Successful Dairying,’* I
being valuable information on the :
most profitable selection of cows, '
their feeding and care, the handling j
of milk to yield the highest price ' i
product, ami the protection and pres- ■
ervatior <>( these products from de- ;
terloratiou; with article on diseases i
of cows, and recipes for their cure. ;
The book is i’r A post card request 1
only is necessary.
With a man an effect must have the I
, i; , with a woman it has its be- !
TO ( I KE A COUGH OR COLD.
Doctor's Preset iption Cures Coughs
and C< ids in a Day.
Mix two ounc. of glycerine, one- j
half ounce Coneantrated Oil of Pine
and one-h; If pint of good whiskey,
shake thorough.y each time and use |
iu doses of a t .ispoonful to a tabl--
spoonful every four hours. The true ,
Concentrated Oil of Pine comes put
up for medicinal uses only in halt'
ounce vials sealed in tin screw top i
cases and is a product of the labora- :
tories of the Globe Pharmaceutical
Co., of Dayton, Ohio. The ingre- j
dients all car. be g len r.t my drug I
store.
He who spi aks from experience (
leaves a lot of tilings unsaid.
Millions in Oats and Bailey.
Nulling will pay you letter for 11)08
than to sow a plents r: big Yielding cats
and bailey will! oaf- :l . :n. t „ .. bu.
(Salzer’s new Emperor William Unfa av
eraged 50 bu. per more liian any
other variety in 1907) would pay immense*
!;. si; Salzer’s Silver King iJariey winch
pr.-ved itself the biggest vielder al the
Wisconsin Agricultural Station during
19i)7 if w-,-.i had plnnt-.i 50 i .-res would
have gnen you m 19 >7 in ■ $3,5iXi,00 on 50
acres, it is an rmous yieider.
JISI*SEND I'll - XOTlC't -IXD 10c
to the John A Salzer Seel Co., La
Cross-*, A is., and we will niail you the ;
most oi-iginrl seed catalog published in
Aiiiei■■■• with samples cf Emperor Md
li.. i lais. Silver King Parley. Billion Dol
lar < . s which produces I'2 tons per acre.
S.'inlT. in the dry soil luxuriator. etv., etc.,
and if \oii send 14c we add a package of
new farm seeds never before seen by
you,
idr- of sensible women ore never |
laatehed with dyes tresses.
V .ain’t von like to try Nature’s mild
ia\,.i;v. Gaiheki Tea? 'Headache Pow
der ■■ 1 Dige.-tive Tablet al. o upon re
cue.-’ s, ;; d pi.' ard to Garfield 'lea Co.,
l!r< Aiyn N. 1.
Doct.irs are in business for health of I
othon- but not for their own
Only One “Bromo Quinine" I
That is Laxative Bromo Quinm -. Look
tor the signatuic of E. W. Grr; e. Lsed the
W; rid over to Cure a Cold - ir. One Day. 25c.
Young men think old men fools, and J
old men know young men to be so. i
Mm Viu-dow's Soothing Syrup for Children
tei thing,. oftenst iivgum-.iedncesinilamma- i
tion, allays pai't,cure.-. wind colic, 25ca bottln I
Tue greatest truths arc the simplest; |
ar ■* are the greatest men,
HOVv THE QUARREL BEGAN.
Young Wife (at home) —Hello,
dearest!
Young Husband (at the office) —
Hello! Who is it —Puck.
FITS, St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per
tnanentlycured by Dr. Kline’s Groat Nerve
Restorer. 42 trial bottle and treatise frea
Di .H. R. Kline. Li,,119.1 Arch St.. Phila, Pa,
The best way to get money, as well
as the slowest, Is to work for it.
Piles Cured in <> to 14 Dnys.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
THE TIME WHEN.
Jack —I may kiss you, then?
Perdita (blushingly)—Some time in
I the future. Jack.
Jack (eagerly)—When?
Perdita —Weil, say the day before
j tomorrow.—Cassell’s Saturday Jour
| nal.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
I for any case of Catarrh that canuot be
I cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.
Wc, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney tor the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
i out any obligations made by his firm.
| WAt.mxo, Kinnan S Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, 0.
i Hidl’sCatarrh Cure istaken internally, act-
. ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuouasur
: faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
I Pi-b e. 75e. per hottie Sold by alt Dniagists.
lake Ila I s Family Pills for constipation.
Again the Spike-Toed Shoe.
A return to the pointed toe shoe for
women's wear is indicated by the
: samples of fall styles now on exhibi
tion. As a matter cf fact. In spite
■ of the fad for "mannish" and com
mon sense shoes which followed the
passing of the needle points." fem
inine footwear has retained a snarp-
, er toe than men’s. It never lost the
' high heel.
But will the sex accept again a
i style which had neither beauty nor
usefulness to recommend It and which
was the direct ally of the chiropodist
' and the surgen'.i? Many of the girls
i who once cramped their toes in point-
I ua chocs have since been golfing and
playing trnni». Ai«r>y more are now
i:i occupations which make the wear
i ing of tight shoes a risk of comfort
and of efficiency which they will hesi
tate to run.
A new style in shoes is not so
j momentous a matter as a new style
iin hats. Shoemakers do not speak
; with the authority of milliners and
. dressmakers. —New York World.
THEY MADE HER.
A grandmother was reproving her
little grandchildren for making so I
much noise.
"Dear me, children, you are so '
noisy today! Can’t you be a little I
more quiet ”
"Now, grandma, you musn't scold ’
us. You see, if it wasn't for us, you j
wouldn’t be a grandma at all.”—Han j
. per’s Weekly.
Cornell Grows Better.
Along with the growing power of
duct of the students is also miproving. ;
This may surprise the educators who ■
think that the more athletics the more ,
moral deterioration.
Just recently at a faculty meeting j
at Cornell it was voted to do away
with the committee on student con- i
duet aftd the committee on student or
gaulzatlons and to create a new com- '
mittee combining their functions. The :
reason was that so little business was .
coming before either 'that one com- I
mittee could do the work without any |
trouble. Dean Crane also made this .
explanation:
“Practically the only duties of the ■
[ committee on student conduct this ■
: fall have been to consider a few I
! cases of fraud in preliminary ex- |
aminers. Cases of disorderly con- ■
I duct are becoming more and more j
I rare.
“The introduction of the honor sys- :
tem into the colleges of law, agri- |
■ culture and civil engineering may be I
responsible for the decrease in cases I
of fraud reported,-as these three col- ’
leges take note of and dispose of their :
own eases but I think the improve- i
ment is mainly attributable to the r
growing sentiment of the students ,
against cheating and dishonesty.’’—
; New York Sun.
A Sultan in London.
Ali Bin Hamoud Bin Mahomet. Sul
tan of Zanzibar, who is once again
: visiting this country in a private and
unofficial capacity, is only twenty-two,
thou is he came to the throne,
■five ye. ago he has striven con
sistently for the improvement of his
country on European lines. He was
educated at a private school in the
south of England, and afterward at
Harrow and Oxford, and is thorough
ly English in his ideas. His great
hobby is collecting clocks, of which
seventy-two may be seen, all ticking
! away merrily, in a single room in
the palau of Zanzibar. It is related
that when the sultan was at school
In this country he one morning rode
a horse, without saddle or bridle
from the school gates down to the
railway station, a mile away, sitting
v.lth his royal and dusky face toward
, the horse's tail and guiding the ani
mal merely by the pressure of his
knees. —London P. I. O.
i SOME COMMON PHRASES EX
PLAINED.
"Pity is akin to love.” And a migh-
I ty poor relation.
"Every man has his price.’ Ex
' cepting always those who give them
i selves away.
"A complication of diseases. Mhat
I a man dies of when the doctors don't
j knew.
"Riches have wings.” But the mil
lionaires’ sons usually open the cage
<1 oors.
"Ignorance is bliss." It must be.
i judging from the happy expressions
j of the majority.
"Love laughs at locksmiths." With
1 a milliner, grocer, and iceman, how
ever, he is usually serious.
“Truth is stranger than fiction."
; Or does it only seem so because we
! have less chance to get well acquaint
i ed with it? —January Lippincott’s.
j. Lord Eldon’s Apology.
t When John Scott (Lord Eldon) was
at -the bar he was remarkable for the
I sang frotd with which he treated the
judges. On one occasion a junior
counsel, on hearing their lordships
I give judgment against his client, ex
claimed that "he was surprised at
such a decision.” This was construed
into contempt of court, and he was
ordered to attend at the court next
morning. Fearful of the consequences
lie consulted his friend John Scott,
Nvho told him to be perfectly at ease,
for he would apologize for him in
away that would avert any unpleas
ant results. Accordingly, when the
name of the delinquent was called,
John rose and coolly addressed the
I assembled tribunal: “I am very sorry
my lords, that my young friend has
•so far forgotten himself as to treat
your honorable bench with disrespect.
He is extremely penitent, and you
will kindly ascribe his unintentional
I insult to ignorance. You must see
at once that it did originate in that.
He said he was surprised at the de
cision of .your lordships. Now, if he
had not been very ignorant of what
takes place at this court every day—
i had he known you but half as long as
I I have —he would not be surprised at
i anything you did.” —Tit-Bits.
--
THE LIMIT.
Clarice: "I think Mr. Gunson is
I dreadfully stingy.”
I Clarence: “Stingy? Why, that
man wouldn’t even tpll a story at his
own expense!"—Harper's Weekly.
• BURE FOOD J
No Food Commissioner of any Stato
has ever attacked the absolute
purily of Grape-Nuts.
i Every analysis undertaken shows
this food to be made strictly of Wheat
! and Barley, treated by our processes
to partially transform the starch
| parts into a form of Sugar, and there
; fore much easier to digest.
Our claim that it is a “Food for
Brain and Nerve relieves" "is bits''<l
: upon the fact tivi' certain parts of
! Wheat and Burley (which we use)
contain Nature’s brain- and nerve-
I building ingredients, viz., Phosphate
ot Potash, and Hie way we prepare
• the food makes it easy to digest and
i assimilate.
Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on
“The Biochemic System of Medicine”
says:
“When the medical profession fully
understands the nature and range of
the phosphate of potassium, insane '
asylums will no longer be needed.
"The gray matter of the brain is !
controlled entirely by the inorganic |
cell-salt, potassium phosphate.
“This salt unites with albumen,
and by the addition of oxygen creates
nerve-fluid, or the gray matter of the
brain
“Os course, there is a trace of other
salts and other organic matter in
nerve-fluid, but potassium phosphate
is the' chief factor, and has tlis power
within itself to attract, by its own
law of affinity, all things needed to
manufacture the elixir of life. There
fore, when nervous symptoms arise,
due to the fact that the nerve-fluid
the pnospndte tit "potassium is ths
only true remedy, because nothing
else can possibly supply the de
ficiency.
“The ills arising from too rapidly
consuming the gray matter of the
brain cannot be overestimated.
“Phosphate ot Potash, is to my
mind, the most wonderful curative
agent ever discovered by man, and
the blessings it has already conferred
on the race are many. But ‘what
shall the harvest be’ when physicians
everywhere fully understand the part
this wonderful salt plays in the pro
cesses of life? It will do as much as
can be done through physiology to
make a heaven on earth.
“Let the overworked business man
take it and go home good-tempered.
Let the weary wife, nerves unstrung
from attending to sick children or en- I
tertaining company, take it and nota
how quickly the equilibrium will ba
restored and calm and reason assert
her throne. No ‘provings’ are ire
quired here. We find this potassium
salt largely predominates in nerve
fluid, and that a deficiency produces
well-defined symptoms. The begin
ning and end of the matter is to sup
ply the lacking principle, and in
molecular form, exactly as nature
furnishes it in vegetables' fruits and |
grain - To supply defi’cieu. ies—this is
the only law of cure.”
Pleasa observe that Phosphate of
Potash is not properly of the drug
shop variety but is best prepared by
“Old Mother Nature" and stored in
the grains ready for use by mankind.
Those who have been helped to better
health by the use of Grape-Nuts are
‘ legion.
I •'There’s a Reason.”
BRAIN POWER
Increased by Proper Feeding.
A lady writer who not only has
done good literary work, but reared
a family, found in Grape-Nuts tha
■ ideal food for brain work and to de
velop healthy children. She writes:
“I am an enthusiastic proclaimer of
Grape-Nuts as a regular diet. 1 for-
1 meriy had no appetite in the morning
; and for 8 years while nursing my four
children, had insufficient nourishment
for them.
"Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint
later, and would go to the pantry and
cat cold chops, sausage, cookies,
! doughnuts or anything I happened to
find. Being a writer, at times my
I head felt heavy and my brain asleep.
“W-hen I read of Grape-Nuts I be
. gan eating it every morning, also
I gave it to the children, including my
: 10 months old baby, who soon grew
I as fat as a little pig, good natured
; and contented.
“I wrote evenings and feeling ths
need of sustained brain power, began
i eating a small saucer of Grape-Nuts
i with milk, Instead of my usual indi-
I gestlble hot pudding, pie, or cake for
I dessert at night.
“I grew plump, nerves strong, and
i when I wrote my brain was active
' and clear; indeed, the dull head pain
! never returned."
POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.,
Rattle Creek, Mich.
The
Ger al‘Demand
of the Well irmed of the World has
always been a simple, pleasant and
efficient liqui xative remedy of known
value; a laxa > which physicians could
sanction for f.uly use because its com
ponent parts t known to them to be
wholesome a: truly beneficial in effeot,
acceptable to * system and gentle, yet
prompt, in ar i
In supplyinghat demand with its ex
cellent comb: ion of Syrup of Figs and
Elixir of Seni. th California Fig Syrup |
Co. proceeds aD; ethical lines and relies I
on the merits o ie laxative for its remark
able success.
That is or t>f many reasons why
Syrup of Figs I Elixir of Senna is given
the prefererv by the Woll-Informod.
To get its I icial effects always buy
the genuine mifactured by the Cali
fornia Fig S Co., only, and for sale
by all leadin ig jists. Price fifty cents
per bottle.
When a w nis really in love with
a man she fe certain the train she is
traveling on 11 be wrecked.
Many ofessionr.l Men,
»borc and singers use ’
Brown’s Brc hial Troches for cur- j
ing hoarsene ind coughs.
It was too 'h apple sauce that got |
old Adam ii trouble.
Taylor's C kee Remedy of Fwcei
Gum and M n is Nature’s great reme
dy—cures Coi Colds, Croup and Con-
sumption. and hroat and lung troubles, i
At druggists, 50e. and $ I.CO per bottle.
Tears of j md sadness come from
the same ta..
SHE CULD NOT WALK
For Months—Burning Humor on ■
Ankles—Ojiates Alone Brought
Sleep xzema Yielded to
?uticura.
“ f had eczeni. for over two years. I had
two physicinns, mt the.v only gave rne re
lief for a stioftyiime and I cannot enum
erate the ointiudi - and lotinns T used to
no Aly ikies were one mass of
sores. Ilia itchirc and burning were so in
tense that T cony not sleep. I could not
walk for nearly | months. One day my
husband said 1 better try the Cuticura
Ib medies. Afteir ing them three ti mes, |
T had the best ni I’s rest in months un
less I took an • 1 used one set of
Cuticura Soap, hutment, and Pills, and
my ankles liealell in a short time. I t
now a year since f ed Cuticnra. and there
has been no return of the eczema. Mrs.
David Br wn. lA.-ke, Ark., May 18 and
July 13, 57.”
j
The better ycii do your present work
the mere apt they are to keep you
there Instead ■ you.
- '
TI »F X.CST.
’ e
bring the
qA . H ache and
s' kA 'i'.jp lasting?
James M.
IXi I3N.Au-
Staunton,
- 11 you - On
v”jk3c* r£j*F jar3 ' 31st. 1903,
k&iCs. Long wrote:
“Doanls Kidney Pills
have cured me" (of
pain in the back,
urinary troti.les, bearing <|own sen
sations, «tc. On June 20th, 1907,
four and icte-hall yearb later, she
said: "I haven’t had kidney trouble
since. I rep* t. my testimony.”
Sold by all lealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N." Y.
The man wl j makes the best use ot
his time gene ally has a good time.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
The exclusiveness of some families
is a fortunate thing for the neighbors.
11/ANTFri ’"•M-wOd Haiul Kurin**
W/ All I I.U AhJ kind, any qtii iii ty. auy-
VV where. Wepny fre!»ht. KK HMONO
B IG < 0.. 11O0.E. C'nry St.. Rlehmond Va.
A Squsre-Deal Answer to
Collier’s Patent Medicine Attack.
We h<ve no quarrel with Mr. Collier or Norman Hapgood, in so
far as they propose to warn the public against the danger to men,
women ard children in indiscriminate use of vicious concoctions of
dangerous drugs and cheap whiskey, disguised as medicines, and in
appalling quantities poured down the throats of the American peo
ple by ucwrupulous charlatans.
But we do not propose to silently submit while a greater wrong
is being perpetrated, which would be the case it indiscriminate crit
icism should so destroy confidence as to lead thousands with slender
means to deprive themselves of that which has given other thou
sands Ufcaa thousands relief from pain and sorrow, -nd enabled
them to (continue in the struggle for daily bread.
Welpropose to carry our case direct to the people, down the
Great Vlhito Way of Publicity, confident that we shall be sustained
by that|vast throng who. knowing by personal experience that an
outward application of Minard’s Liniment relieves pain and brings
peace of mind and body, also know that its use involves no dangers
such as are charged against medicines to be taken internally.
Anj we propose, further, to carry the case direct to those who
have never used Minard's Liniment, by Inviting them to send us a
postal today and receive by return mail, free, a special bottle, am
ple to jrove that it will do all that is claimed for it.
Whl-n you realize that Minard's Liniment had its birth in the
prescription of the late Doctor Levi Minard, who used it and rec
ommenced it in his private practice, 55 years ago, and that by per
sonal recommendation it has since come into universal use, and that
each par an increasing number of people use it, you begin to appre
ciate tjat our confidence in its merit is but reflecting the faith ex
pressed by those who depend upon it, who know by experience that
it is bekt for them, that it stands alone as the most effective, econ
omical and clean-to-use external application for rheumatism, neural
gia, pleujisy, stiff, twisted joints, sore, strained, or lame muscles,
tired, aciing feet or any pain or ache.
Why This Statamsnt ?
Bectjise we propose from time to time to tell you of the merits
ami to lit others testify to the personal benefit derived from Mi
nard's liniment, so pure and antiseptic, so powerful, penetrating
and sooting as to have justly earned its title. King ot Pain. We
know yiji believe in the doctrime of the Square Deal We ask you to
tell othjis of the good Minard’s Liniment has done you. Yours
respectlily, Minard's Liniment Mfg. Co., So. Framingham, Mass.
SEND THE POSTAL.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goo !s>Hghtftr and taster colors than any other dye. One 10c. package colors all libenc They dy e ln coJJwWil Vm? d |««nn2?
can dye any g'try'ht without ripping apart. Write tor free booklet—How to Dye, bleaca and Mix Colors. SiONROL 1R <* vv., Quint). II dm
Avery & Company
SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN.
81-K3 South Forsytl> St., Atlanta, Go.
—ALL KINDS OF—
MACHINERY
( : 1 y
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
Large Engines and Boilers tmpplled
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs,
i Steam Governors. Full line Engines &
. Mill Supplies. Send for free Caialoque.
f N
Write at once and learn why we secitfe best
positions, and best salaries for our graduates.
Eugene Anderson, Pres. J
THE SOUTH 8 FAVORITE COFFEE . . I
I Why? > ‘/A
Because it is— r r (
imported direct from the
iffee markets in the vvorld.\.«
Roasted and blended accord- /
gto tlie old Creole forji’' ,a , I
nich has made N?” Ofleans J J
Tfee famous for’AO years.
Goes') hot from , roasters and ]
inders into air-tight tin cans,) s
escrviiig its strength and
■ious flavor. (. ) , hn '
Soldkatmedium' pricejandM
quire- only i half as) much
her kinds. \\ ( > (/'■ x®
ASK VOVR GROCER FOR IT. ) TO
HE REILY-TAYLOR CO..J
's' I ''''V 3 " LEANS ' l A
..
fi ® ?
Cures Constipation, Diarrhoea, Convulsions,
Colic, Sour Stomach, etc. It Destroys Worms,
Al’.ays Feverishness and Colds. It Aids Diges
tion. It Makes Teething Easy, Promotes Cheer
fulness and Produces Natural Sleep.
$150.00 BUYS
The most complete Saw Mill
built in the Southern States.
Gainesville Iron Works,
Gain<*«vine, (la,
(At-7’08)
Big Crops -lip*
Mean Bigger W Profits
Big profits from cotton, tobacco, &nd fe'' such garden crops as
corn, tomatoes, cabbage, lettuce,~Eeets Y and all other vegeta-
H/ bles and fruits depend upon their uniform • and rapid growth. Big
g/ ger crops and quicker and larger growth are positively assured through
I? high fertilization with
i Vu^aia-CaixMa' «
• Fertilizers
That Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers are far superior to any other fertilizers Is
proved by the experience of Mr. I). MGrifiin, I). I). S. of Plant City, Ida.,
who says: “I was trucking on a small scale, and decided I would try a few
sacks or your fertilize:, as it was cheap aid said to be good. 1 put it un
der some tomatoes by the side of some other high graae fertilizer which J
cost me fl 5 a ton more, and in the same proportion per acre. I don t /-j
think I exaggerate in the least in seying that the yield where I used
i Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers was three titnes that of where I used ftSf
j, the other brand of so-called high-grade fertilizer. /««., W/
(!• Many valuable pointers on truck farming written by government 1/
iuL and private authorities, will be found in our new Farmers \ car f ’vA
Book or Almanac. Get a copy at your fertilizer dealers’, or
p- v." ite to our nearest sales office. It is l-ree. /
gdr. d « i
Virginia-Carolina Chemi cal Co.
Richmond, Va. Durham, N. C. 1
Norfolk, Va. Charleston, S. C. /
Columbia, S. C. Baltimore, Md. V WB
Atlanta, Ga. Columbus, Ga. / A
Sivannah.Ga. I A 1
Montgomery, Ala. / ' ' ■' Z ~ A ■
K '-WVx H A I
X- ■■■ .<]
Lol niaCanillflitaW
sSy SHHfe. Ga
W fe--
: :
; vfelrl If so, you no doubt received free, one of these buttons from jHw
the S. C. exhibit, given you by the N. H. Blit< h < 0., tho
Eglargest Vcgi tabic and Plant farm combined ir the world,
S We will be glad to have your orders for cabbage and garden W
K- plants of all kinds, raised in tho open air. Special express w
13- : rt Wy O *33 rates. Prices as follows:—1,COO to 5,000 atsl.sopcr 1,000; 5,000 W
» O .T ato 10.CCO nt $1.25 r-er 1,000; over 10 000: t SI.OO ver 1,(00, f. o. b. ■ r
Ka- 1 - VXL'I"’-'' ' • '-lai-.-.i.:' ■ .-"Uiil, •;■ all b"!'.a-fide U
BEL V 1 6*l. ria-0 an I .■ nr "npl hhipnn nts. All see<S purchase ! G>.iu the most WR
aSfS, V y' I..;! ’.-S 'IJ. : -trant.-ed true type. Wo have extra early or large 4CT
■MMSgK’ v '~ ty’’e Wakeiield t!-.c H r.ilerson sucsessiou and ilat Dutch varieties of cab-
I' 1 ""'- A:.V order, to N. H. BLITCH CO., Meogett, S. C. »s®! I
PRICLS, FOR EVERYg / 2
OFTHEFAMILY, S \ 3
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES ANO CHILDREN. g. . A 0
men's $2.88,53.0U and
__ than zsrpjr ether manufacturer htM
world, because they hold
show, fft better, wear Sosriio?. and NWL '
HCaw are of greater value than any ether rM
t'-'® ehoes fft the world to-day.
■ iUr-r , . .-V.'.-. • r. At Any Prinn d
Bold t'V tile best shoe dealers ev rywhei--.. fiuoes front More So mV par-01 mevTO w
Catalog tee to any address. W. X.. ■OIWMA »• ocu-tou,
THAT WILL MASLE I
Ear'y Jersey' Charleston Larqe Henderson’s Early Early
Waxefleld Type Wakefield Succession Winning Svfltdt Summer
I am located on one of the Sea Islands of South Carolina, our climate is mild,
just sufficient cold to harden and cause plants to stand severe freezing after
eat: ing out in the colder secl’ona. I guarantee satisfaction or money refunded. Express rates to a.l
points very leaf. Triers: 1.000 to S.OuC at V 1.50; 5,000 to 9.000 at JI.ZS; 10,000 and Oves at S. 00.
Special prices on large lots. Send your orders to
IP- vv, c jC w Pioneer Plant Grower
Mlct, YsmD Isltri, S. C. Martin’s Point. S. C. tsw Blstaaca ftCT, Mtrtlt’t Flint, i. C.
gihCabbage Plants
O JEit Sb jK- X-j
We are prepared to till ordersnow with any of the following varieties of Cabbage
Plants, thes? being the best known reliable varieties to experienced planters: Early
Jersey Wakefield, Charleston Large Typo Wakefields and lie ider on Successions.
Prices $1.25 per 1,000; in lots of over 5,000 at SI.OO
per 1,000, and in lots of 10,000 at 90c per 1,000.
Address all Orders to THE MEGGETT PLANT Meggeth S. C.
Charleston Early Jersey Z UCCESS y? N
WAKEFIELD
Eariiest Cabbage Grown y ar | e jy
CABBAGEPLANT's For Sale
I AM ON MY ANNUAL TOUR around the world with any of the best-known varieties of
Open-Air Grown Cabbage Plants at the following prices, viz: 1,000t04,000, at $1.50 per
H thousand; 5.000 to 9,000, at $1.25; 10,000 or more, at 90c., F. O. B Meggett, S. C. All orders
I promptly filled and satist'action guaranteed. Ask for prices on 50,000 or 100,000. Cash accom-
S vanying all orders
I Address B. L. COX. Ethel, S. C., Box 8
20 j?“ le
4 earn
BORAX
All dealers. Sample, Booldet au I Parlor Car 1 Gam'x
10cents. Pacific Const Berax Co.* New York.
morphine
and other drop habits are positively cured by
HA BITINA. For hypodermic or internal
use. Sample sent to any drug habitue > *
by mail, in plain wrapper. Regular price $2.00.
DELTA CHEMICAL COMPANY
1144 Holland Building H- Louis, Mo.
gdßOti
B 8 ia the man or woman who, loving a
good dinner, must curb their appetite BK
fcj through fear of after consequences.
g Parsons’Pills f
are an aid to digestion, insure assimikv- C7
gg| tion of food, and make hearty eating
possible without dl-.tress or regrets. gg
BB Price 25c., five bottles sl. All druggists. JSS
g| I. S. WH«SS?! & CCltostcn, Mass.
Dropsy s
V Removes all swelling in 8 to 30
' ’etr*’ days ; effects a permanent euro
A\ in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment
V*/ n free. Nothingcan be fairer
V‘3 Write Dr. H. H. Creen’s Sans,
~“v s™Sneciaiists, Box b Atlanta, Oi*
*
Ohl Papa don’t forget to buy ■
bottle of CM NEY’S EXPECTO
RANT for your little girl
You can buy it at any Drug
Store and you know it lever laila
i to cure my Croup and -ougU.