Newspaper Page Text
'Elixir sfSenna
System Effect
ti tillv, Dispels I olcLs (indrleaa
'• tes Jup to Constipation;
; ‘s naturally, acts Truly as
a 1 laxative.
'■ '■ d jorMenVomen an JCUd- i
■ •■t:n<' and Old.
* its Bene|icial Ejjects
k’L| e genuine which
Hie pill name of the C om- I
' ALIFORNIA
-> Syrup Co.
manufactured,printed on the
t of e\ery package.
TALL LEADING
r.nly, regular price 50* p.. bottle.
I TEEN HUNDRED AND
SIXTY-FIVE MEN
irn> are selling our products W
■■ in thirty four different States,
.seful articles that country people
we furnish the goods and give agents
to turn them into money. Address.
J. R. Watkins Co., Winona, Mir" l -
cure A _ t r
‘-’cries in School of Shark*
Ships coming to port from No
Mans I.and bring report” of achoolj
of ravenous sharks mat Infest the
ocean mils- tic to Martha's Vine
yard.
Members of the crew of the fishing
schooner Priscilla, Capt. Fred De
Wolf, declare that fishermen in the
Pri- ilia's dories recently had a bat
tle with a .ohool of sharks that tried
to overturn the boats.
A ci ical moment came when the
• 311:1. xs rushed on the dories from sev
eral ways at once. The boats were
kept upright with great difficulty.
Some of the sharks leaped from the
water as if to view what was In the
1 ' ars >n the rush three of the big
gest sharks became engaged In a bat
tle among themselves, an opportunity
which the fishermen took to row has
tily to the schooner. One of the
sharks, it is said, was more than fif
teen feet long.—Boston Herald.
Hicks’ Capudine Cures Women’s
Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness,
•nd Headache. It’s Liquid. Effects imme
diate y. Iprescribed by physicians with best
results. 10c._ 2jc„ and 50c„ at drug stores.
CROSS-COUNTRY RIDING IN WEST.
Good Sport Following the Hounds In
Illinois.
“Did not know fox hunters rode to
hounds out here in the West, did
you' said B. N. Green. “Like every
on else I suppose you thought that
sort of sport was confined to the East
Never more mistaken irf-your life.
That sport is indulged In down In
parts of Illinois tnd is hugely en
joyed.
"They don’t get themselves up in
red coats, nor do they have packs
of hounds kept for that purpose, but
there are some excellent cross-coun
try riders dowu there and any one
looking for hard riding can get it. I
used ‘ o-n down every fall a 1
er failed of lu
laiieu oi na _
■ rue pack o! "ouuds were gener
ally picked up in the neighborhood,
augmented by some brought In by
those who. like myself, came In from
the outside. The roads there are made
>n the section lines and subdivided
into quarter sections, so where fields
were fenced in you could still keep
n ar the hounds. Then there were
creek bottoms and open places whe’e
you < ould show your ability to stick
on your horse.
The farmers enjoyed the sport
when their crops were in, in fact the
fie i was made up of people of
every class, including ministers. I re
member one minister who went out
: eve: al times a week and was a hard
rider, always being tn at the death,
or. if n prettv close to the finish.
It was good sport too and every one
enjoyed t. There were always plen
ty of foxes and we hardly ever fail
ed nt r. stood run " '--Milwaukee Seit
ALMOST A SHADOW
Gained 20 lbs. on Grape-Nuts
There’s a wonderful difference be
tween a food which merely tastes
good and one which builds up
strength and good healthy flesh.
It makes no difference how much
we eat unless we can digest it. it is
not really food to the system until it
is absorbed. A Yorkstate woman
says:
I had been a sufferer for ten years
with stomach and liver trouble, and
had got so bad that the least bit of
food such as I then knew, would give
me untold misery for houre after
eating.
“I lost flesh until I was almost 8,
shadow of my original self tad my
friends were quite alarmed about qae,
-*» First I dropped coffee and use<£
Postum, then began to use Grape-
Nuts, although I had little faith It
would do me any good.
“But I continued to use the food
and have gained twenty pounds In
weight and feel like another person
in every way. I feel as it life had
truly begun anew for me
“I can eat anything I Hite now tn
moderation, suffer no HI effects, be on
my feet from morning until night.
Whereas a year ago they had to send
me away from home for rest while
others cleaned house for me, this
spring I have been able to do it my
self all alone.
■ My breakfast is simply Grape-Nuts
with cream and a cup of Pottum, with
sometimes an egg and a piece of
toast, but generally only Grape-Nuts
and Postum. And I can work until
noon and not feel as tired as one
hour’s work would have made me a
year ago.” “There’s a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to
Wellvllle,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of hu*M
fatoreeu —•
FIRED ON TROOP TRAIN
Three Men Killed and Eleven
Wounded by Strikers.
LOG PLACED ACROSS TRACK
Over One Hundred and Fifty Shots En
tered Cars—Conductor Was Killed.
Eight Arrests Made.
Birmingham, Ala. —Three men were
instantly killed and eleven injured,
two of whom will probably die, when
striking miners fired into a passenger
train on the Birmingham Mineral rail
road at Blocton, Ala.
The dead are: Conductor Joe T. Col
line; O. Z Dent, deputy sheriff; Wil
lard Howell, non-union miner. The in
jured are; Major F. H. Dodge, super
intendent of safety, Tennessee Coal
company, wounded in hand and leg;
E. E. Cox, superintendent of mines,
Tennessee Coal company, slightly
wounded in knee; A. E, Cross, chief
clerk, superintendent’s office, wound
ed in arm and knee; J. C. Johnson,
deputy sheriff, slightly wounded in
side; A. C. Bryant, deputy sheriff,
slightly wounded in side; J. B. Cor
nett, deputy sheriff, wounded in the
back; W. 11. MeAtily, soldier, slight
injuries; M. A. Pearson, soldier,
wounded in left shoulder; J. C. Mar
tin, wounded in head, back and arm;
;*• 'V!' 1 ’ ; -' ! >orer, wounded in leg;
Ilobeit Sigmon, wounded in arm anti
breast.
The train was a special bearing
1 non-union men to the Blocton mines
1 under guard of soldiers and deputies.
, On the outskirts of the town the en
gineer suddenly saw a log across the
track and at once a, fusilade was fired
into the train. The engineer did not
■ stop, but. let the cowcatcher throw
1 the log from the track and put on
1 full speed. The place where the at
tack was made Was in a cut, the
ground being on a level with the low
er part of the windows. The assail
ants behind the rocks above poured
down a murderous fire directly into
the windows and at the engineer.
Practically every window in the train
was broken, and shots struck all parts
of the engine and cab. The train pro
ceeded to Blocton and the dead and
injured were returned" to Birming
ham.
Dogs were hurried to the scene, and
took trails through the woods direct
ly to the union quarters. Eight men
were arrested and other arrests are
expected.
Governor Comer held a hurried con
ference with Lieutenant Colonel Hub
bard, commanding the militia: and an
other company was hurried to Bloc
ton.
The trouble caused widespread in
dignation, and a general demand is
being made that more strenuous ac
tion be taken looking to the preser
vation of order.
BATTLESHIPS REACH AUCKLAND.
American Fleet Drops Anchor in New
Zealand Port.
Auckland, New Zealand. —Sixteen
white ships, comprising the battleship
division of the United States Atlantic
fleet, under command of Rear Admi
ral Charles S. Sperry, arrived here at
8:40 o'clock Sunday morning and an
chored in two columns in the road
stead abreast the city, after a voyage
of thirty-three days from San Fran
cisco.
When the warships entered the har
bor the usual salutes were exchanged
between them and the shore batteries
and the Australian flagship' Powerful
and the cruisers Eneojw'- .
- is PlaTarra _
u. is eiauoix „ „ JU .
honor of the visit ot 'Hie Americans"
’ and thousands of persons have al-
■ ready come Into the city in order tc
r assist in paying homage to the offl
i vers and men. The townspeople are
> enthusiastic over the visit, of their
I American cousins, and throughout the
I day thronged the water front of the
city to view the stately ships lying at
anchor in the roadstead.
WOKd EUR MANY MEN.
More Than 52.000,000 Worth of Work
Awaiting the Idle".
Pittsburg, Pa. —Calling for 24,000
tons of steel plate, an order has been
placed with Pittsburg steel mills, forc
ing idle machinery into action and
summoning more men back to work.
With Pittsburg steel plate manufac
turers figuring on contracts for up
ward of 7,000 tons of plates for steel
cars for railroad requirements, there
i comes another contract that is to be
awarded in a brief period.
New York City has awarded the
or in round figures a value amounting
contract for the construction of the
Amityville pipe Hue, a new water sup
ply main of steel. The tonnage is es
timated at from 24,000 to 27,0n0 tons
to $1,000,000.
DEATH TU BOLL WEEVIL.
Powdered Arsenate of Lead Will Kill
the Pest.
Baton Rouge, La.—That powdered
arsenate of lead may prove the solu
tion of the boll weevil problem, is
the suggestion made in a bulletin is
sued by the state crop pest commit
tee The bulletin gives the results of
1 some experiments made this year with
the arsenate ot lead, and mentions
that in one instance it killed 70 per
i cent of the boll weevils in the local-
■ ity where it was tried. State Ento
mologist Newell says that two applica
tions of the preparation will clear a
field entirely of the weevils.
This is the first poison that the Lou-
■ isiana state crop pest commission has
’ endorsed for killing boll weevils.
t Tattoo Wives and Stop Divorces.
Warsaw, Ind.—“ There would be
t fewer affinities and divorces if all
i married women in the United States
1 were tattooed on the chin," said Rev.
Arthur Rawei, a native of Maoriland,
1 N. S„ addressing an audience of 3,000
1 at Winona Lake assembly. He added:
I “Now that I am headed for Washing
’ ton, I think that I shall ask President
Roosevelt to use his influence to have
’ such a bill put through congress."
TIRED OF OWNING RAILWAYS.
i
1 Japan May Transfer the Roads to Pri
t vate Parties.
> Tokio, Japan.—There is a fresh
1 confirmation of a movement which
* appears to have for its object the re
-1 transfer of the nationalized railways
to private hands. The leaders of the
' movement are two men of much prom
' inence. namely: Senggoku and Yama
da, who are bringing pressure to bear
’ on the government with regard to
• hastening the time for handing over
i the bonds which represent the pur
chase price, ..J » -
1 DEBATED
much pleased at the results obtained
1 from the use of the phonograph for (WiL-H •, j c . . m d ~
the dissemination of their political '-’nited p-ates—No Better
speeches. Governed Titan Empires.
• Missouri has come to the front with —■
• »“ the capital well governed
announces himself the proud father of
twins. As a good republican he has _
undertaken to perpetuate the whole Though Not Demotratic—Admiration is
tional ticket and the state ticket by Expressed for Cur Supreme Court
naming one boy Howard Taft Heav- n.k 1
ner in honor of Judge Taft and the Otherlnft.tut.ons,
other Hadley Sherman Heavner, to
honor the second place on the ticket ~ nn ’ Englatd.—The “constitu
as well as Hadley, Missouri's republi- tl . on con B ress which has been in ses
. can candidate for governor. at . tbe Fraifcoßritish exhibition
\V t Hrvan t o • ,u discussing safeguirds for the various
gestion of Harvo rarb g ,h^. sug ," constitutions to provide for maintain
ehairman f of H Virvini? . b 1 national ln 8 personal liberty and responsibility,
sonal le ter Irel'h t. h‘ “ Pei " haS closed with a debate on the con
voter in’Uo a h h.r h i ‘I s . ° f ery stitution of the United States. During
B Schmidt Os n? t b «l Ul n S h? te " E( ! Sar lhe course of the discussion Professor
I’incol mo es. ’ Ohio, went to Albert Venn Dicey of Oxford referred
before the .India t y p ace lhe ldea what he described as a “melancholy
b “l?ift can mo M d rft a r a P ai 'adox." He said that, while the
into d m^ P United States started with an advan-
was hl~ Tftt’ 1 me Ihs tage unknown in am other country—
manti rn !n ! a g^ lng reply . When with a constitution designed with
granting an audience to a number of more care more skill and ninrn rhc
Sre W ssed P hLn m a e s n '“Vt‘; o^ ad c . ess than any other constHu-
ernor" and “Mr Taft ,® cretary ' Gov ‘ lio n deliberately designed by man—
yet the candid American citizen would
Richard V. Oulahan, for many years sa y that, on the vhole, they are little
a leading writer with the New York better governed than the best Europe-
Sun, will have genetal charge of the an state; while lit: candid European
literary work for the republican na critic would put that the United
tional committee. States is not milch worse governed
Senator Taylor of Tennessee has than lhe best stat ’’ of Eu rope. That
charge of the plan by which a straw W ? s ,he parad6x f a country filled
vote win be taken in every state in w,th n °ble nooplc 1 who were governed
x Ji* x-vx-ij CLiAlv 111
the union.
Mr. Bryan has consented to speak
at the Minnesota state fair, provided
no admission to the grounds is to be
charged.
The campaign for the election of
state officers of South Carolina has
stirred up a hot fight between the
ministers and politicians of that state.
The ministers have taken the stump
an dare bitterly opposing what they
term “ring rule."
Mr. Taft’s fatal gift of beauty has
led an Indiana burglar to steal ten
thousand of his campaign buttons.
Mr. Bryan has issued an appeal to
the “common people,” asking for cam
paign contributions.
John Temple Graves, candidate of
the independence party for vice pres
ident, underwent a slight operation
in a private hospital in New York
City.
The democrats of New England in-
VL .IV" JGJllfelClllU 111"
e tend to make a fight to keep their
section out of the republican column.
J' Henry Watterson has written sev
' eral thousand letters to democratic
' editors waking them up to the im
poitance of getting in behind Bryan.
Mr. Taft has received from a Phil-
J adelphia admirer the left hind foot of
’ a rabbit, gold mounted. The gift was
accompanied by a note expressing the
hope that the rabbit foot would offset
the luck given to Mr. Bryan when he
was presented with a horseshoe.
It is announced that William Ran
dolph Hearst will start a daily paper
in Atlanta. Ga., in the interests of the
par'y.
Alton B. Parker, democratic Candi
date for president in 1904, delivered
his first speech of the present cam
paign in behalf of Mr. Bryan and Mr.
Kern before an audience of 2,000 per
sons at Temple Auditorium in Los
Angeles, Cal.
Lincoln, Nebraska, Typographical
Union voted to make William Jen
nings Bryan an honorary member.
The action of the union was nearly
unanimous. su<> opposition?''" there
' ' ac-
■ JUu. i
•we**. j ng au
7 tyovenior sneldqn who is a republi
can. also was made an honorary mem
ber.
The headquarters of the democratic
national committee have been formal
ly opened in the Auditorium Annex,
at Chicago.
Thomas E. Watson, the populist
candidate for president, is busy mak
ing speeches in his home state, Geor
gia. Mr. Watson is fighting for the
electoral vote of Georgia.
In order to relieve Taft of criticism
on account of the Brownsville sol
diers, General Corbin has given out
a hitherto unpublished dispatch from
Roosevelt, showing that the order
came directly from the president.
Mr. Bryan • has an engagement to
meet all the leading labor leaders of
the country for a conference at Chi
cabo August 22.
Mr. Bryan is availing himself of the
cool weather by utilizing every spare
moment of his time in preparing the
several sections of the speeches he
will make. The one on tariff is ex
pected to be an exhaustive treatment
of the subject and will be one of the
j moot important of his utterances dur
ing the campaign. The speech will be
delivered at Indianapolis.
Norman E. Mack, democratic cam
paign manager, is in almost daily con
ference with Mr. Bryan over the long
distance telephone.
The action of the Western Tariff
Association in refusing to make spe
cial rates to Lincoln, Neb., upon the
occasion of the notification of Mr. Bry
an has caused much disappointment
among democrats who were prepar
ing to take a monster crowd from
the east.
A horseshoe bearing the inscription
"traveling across the continent to
bring good luck to Billy B. and the
democratic party,” has arrived at New
Orleans tied to the rear-end of a pas
senger train. It was transferred to
another road and started on its jour
ney to San Francisco.
Frank Hitchcock, the republican
campaign manager, is making almost
daily visits to President Roosevelt at
Oyster Bay.
Judge Taft, accompanied by Mrs.
Taft, drove forty miles across country
In a buckboard to attend a horse show
at White Sulphur Springs, Va.
John Sharp Williams, nominee for
senator from Mississippi, and former
leader of the democratic minority in
the national house of representatives,
absolutely refused to deliver a demo
cratic partisan address at a Preston,
lowa, Chautauqua.
Mr. Bryan proposes to a consider
able extent to conduct his own cam
paign and will spend much time be
tween now and election day at the
democratic headquarters at Chicago.
Judge Taft addressed the Virginia
State Bar Association, taking as his
subject “The Law’s Delay.” The bur
den of his speech met with the ex
pected approval of the lawyers pres
ent.
William Randolph Hearst, together
with Hisgen and Graves, the indepen
dence party candidates, will make a
tour of the southern states in the in
terest of their party.
in away that would not for a moment
■be tolerated in 11,I 1 , ris, London or Ber
lin.
The city of Washington is well ad
ministered, contituel Professor Dicey,
because it was ntt democratically gov
erned. It is governed by commission
ers appointed by, congress, a body not
nearly so democrats as the crown of
England. Profes»or Dicey expressed
admiration for the supreme court,
which he said wls one of the most
successful instituinns,” but he doubt
ed whether the lain nee of power ex
isting in the Un ted States could ex
ist in any Euroikan country.
Guyot, the Flinch political econo
mist and former minister of public
works, thought /he constitution of
America has mary advantages for a
democratic counj and. though pos
sibly too rigid, a: the other hand, it
prevented wild t terprises.
AMERICAN fIiODS WANTED.
r Foreign Dealers favor United States-
Made ’roducts.
New York City—Optimistic views ,
on business condtions abroad and the
outlook for Anerican enterprises l
there were expressed by Darwin P. j
Kingsley, a proninent financier of i
this city, who hr; just returned from i
a four months' ip through all the 1
principal countriL of Europe, includ
ing European ’Rissia. He said that
he sought out an met men of every 1
class and interv wed bankers and
government minisers in nearly all the
capitals of Europe
“1 found practically no hostility to 1
Americans or An-rican institutions,”
he continued, i the contrary, the
products of Ami; an enterprises arc
today more largely in evidence than. i
ever before. Ji every considerable
city there are hmdsome plants offer
ing successfully A aorican plows, reap
ers and all kinds bf agricultural imple
ments, sewing machines and insur
ance.
“GovernmenG»u av.lations are strict,
but tittid the foreign in
surance deyr ;; friend]: - in their
attitude to rican companies.
None of / t countries has t
adopted/ .-iJH.' toward k
r,,f 41i <ls
BEGINS bwi'AT WATERWAY. "
Land Condemned 'or Right of Way in
North Carolina.
Raleigh, N. ■' U.—Orders in seven
cases of condemned lands for right
of way for the inland waterway from
Pamlico Sound io Beaufort harbor,
have been signal by Judge Thomas
. R Purnell in t»e federal court for
the eastern distr.’t of North Carolina.
This starts th work on the great
inland waterway that will eventually
give an inland ater route to com
merce from the reat lakes and Bos
‘ ton to North Ct olina at least south
of the dread Ha eras and perhaps Io
Florida. This wi 1 be the first link in
1 the gigantic ch; i of canals.
The contract has been let for the
construction of tl s portion of the in
land waterway Ml under the contract
' the work is Io b< commenced Decem
‘ ber 1. There wi I be about sixteen
' miles of cut. Tis canal will prob
’ ably be dug before the deepening of
Beaufort harbor The inland water
way will go on Pamlico river. Xi’iis-e
’ river Core creek out into Beaufort
’ harbor. Congress a< it; last session
! appropriated ? 51’,000 with which to
begin the wor
Train Wreck mses Three Deaths.
’ Imboden, Ar! - Three persons were
killed and four jadly injured and a
• number of passengers slightly bruised
and shaken up when engine No. 210,
pulling ‘Frisco : issenger train 206,
was derailed tw- ive miles east of
tliis city. The engine dashed headlong
over a 12-foot m 1 ankment. pulling the
mail, bagage ind smoking cars with
it. The gas tank in Hie mail car ex
ploded and the mail car, with all the
1 mail, was burned. A party of sailors
put out the fire, which started in the
baggage car, and saved the baggage.
The dead are Engineer Cooper of
1 Memphis, Tenn Fireman Lee Booker
of Memphis, Term.; man supposed to
be H. F. Overs, residence unknown.
Scores Are Man/jled by Hurricane.
Szegedin, Hungary.—During a hur
ricane which swtpt over this section
of the country a large factory col
lapsed and a hutdred workmen w - ere
burled in the mins. Four corpses
and fourteen persons severely hurt,
have been recovered from the debris,
Seventy persons are still missing. Sze
gendin is 96 miles southeast of Buda
pest, and after Budapest is the most
populous city of the kingdom. It has
an extensive trade and is noted for
the manufacture of food products.
Three Men Instantly Killed.
New York City.—Crushed beneath
a heavy cement drain which had fall
en in upon them while they were at
work in the yaid of the St. John’s
orphan asylum it Brooklyn, Thomas
Roche, Charles Tmony and John Mc-
Laughlin were iistantly killed.
Mother Dri'en to Suicide.
St. Louis, Mo.—Mrs. Annie Heine
mann, hearing gossip that her, 15-year-
I old daughter was planning to marry
: secretly, decided that this was the
1 climax of other troubles and ended
her life with cubolic acid.
The Pinch Came
r /AN and onr f* dend decided to cut down on Ills
JJ: grocery bills. He bought a pound of coffee T?
rn at 15 cent; and it lasted exactly three days, W
/K —lnsipid, dish-watery staff at that. He went
back to LUZIANNE COFFEE at 25cts which «<| W
always lasted a week, all the time delicious
and satisfying He loaned the losson that
Jcwcr price does not always spell economy, ™
» /ft HAVE Y’Ot learned It yet t \|/
® LUZIANNE COFFEE The Reily-Taylor Co. W
Bold Everywhere NKW ORLEANS, V.I.A.
I-
THE CLOSED HOUSE.
s When a house is closed for the
1 summer it is better to hang lace cur
, tains straight from frames or beams
' in a dark room than to fold them 111
’ chests or allow them to hang at the
I windows. Portieres and heavy drap
eries should also be hung in this
> way, they should be covered with un- '
bleached muslin into which pieces of ■
camphor have been sewn.—Harper's
1 Bazar. , . _
CURBS All ITCHING ERUPTIONS.
Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: ‘-I have had
eczema on my bands for 12 years, and have
tried everything. I have been using TFT.
tehine 4 days and the results are great.”
Signed, Mrs. M. Harvey. Tetteiunb is the
surest, safest, speediest cure for eczema
and all other skin diseases. Sold by drug
gists or sent by mail for 50e. by J. T, Saur
tbinb, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
HE HAD IT.
Mr. Young—“l tell you, it’s endur- I
ance, the staying quality, that makes
one successful in life.”
Miss Pert (glancing at the clock)— i
“I guess you’ll get on.”—Boston Trans. '
cript.
To Drive Out Malaria and Build Us
the System
Take the Old Standard Grovb’s Tastb
lzss Chill Tonic. You know what you
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
and children. 50c.
“Flies must go,” is the latest edict
of science. And after the mosquitoes
and the flies and the fleas there will
be the gnats, fears the Louisville
Courier-Journal, w'hich may possibly
organize and overcome the human
race when it Is tired out from kill
ing the larger insects.
GEE I DO N'T THAT COItN HURT !
Stop the pain and get rid of the corn
quiokly and permanently. Abbott’s bast In
dian cobn faint will remove any corn, bun
ion or callous spot without cutting, burn
ing, or “eating” the flesh and leaves no
soreness afterwards. Applied with a brush;
mighty little trouble. 25c. at druggists or by
mail from The Abbott Co., Savannah, Ga.
Occasionally a weak-voiced “ iari
uses strong language.
FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL.
Discharged Because Doctors Could
Not Cure.
Levi P. Brockway, S. Second Ave.,
Anoka, Minn., says: “After lying for
five months in a
\ hospital I was dis-
R. ,- charged as incura
<' ble, and given only
L six months to live.
7 My hoart was a,tect “
: . J ed, I had smother
ing spells and some
'wrk Hmes fell uncon-
scious. I got so 1
.JaLL.'ll!’
ordered. L wfe completely wor Lui.
and discouraged W'hen I began using
Doan’s Kidney Pills, but they went
right to the cause of the trouble and
did their work well. I have been
feeling well ever -.ince.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
The loan shark has the coin of van
tage over people who borrow trouble.
* SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR
Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarette and Tobacco Habits.
Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION. Administered
Specialists for thirty years. Correspondence conlidential.
BjfwW! The Only Keeley Institute in Georgia.
Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA.
American Cotton College
For the education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton
Buyer*, Manufacturers, and all others, young or old, who are unable to classify
and put the correct valuation on 18 Grades of Cotton. Thirty day scholarships iu
cur sample rooms, or six weeks’ correspondence course under expert cotton men
will complete you. Big demand for cotton graders and cotton buyers. Session opens
Sept. Ist. Correspondence course year round. Write at once for further particulars.
tin f Sr rill
I | I Magnificent budding*, costing Sioo.ooo Elegant appointments Refined and ChmtianX
k| 11 kome. Pianos and furniture all new Ideal location nea. the mountains All college n
W Is courses- Conservatory unsurpassed Teacher* from <he best schools of Europe and ll
America Opens September 18. 1908 For handsome catalog, address M- W HATTON //
and O. W. ANDERTON. Presidents- Florence. Al
Southern Female College students will attend Florence University for 1908-1909.
THE LIMEIf
The old time remedy for constipation. Violent ®
in its action. Containing a large percentage of
mercury, it often produces griping and nausea. r
Persistently used it causes ill health, decayed
teeth and digestive troubles.
[NUBIAN TEA brings relief and curps ten
dency towards chronic stomach troubles. Works S
quietly and effectively. Being a vegetable com- M nl-SrfcA S
pound it follows nature’s methods with nature’s H ■
remedies. Secures proper circulation of blood R IftSSsSC |
through the intestines and free secretion of bile, a uvEM»ans ■
both necessary to healthful condition of the di- ■ £
geative system. 3 B
From hundndx ot tutlmonlals waquotat g SySsSSk S
"Millville. Fla.~Pl«oso shin at once four doeen Nubian S S
Tea Liquid, conceded to bo the beet liver medicine ever acid in H ■
this section. D. L. Burgese.” All dealers sell it. ■ ■
Manufactured by SPENCER MEDICINECO. Chattanooga, Tenn. B SojtjjSaSfe S
TELEGRAPHY FREE! Bookkeeping and Shorthand at Half Rate! ng. we are offering our Telegraphy Course I
and Business Course at half rate to all students who enroll before the 25th of September. Our equipment is very complete. Healthy Location. Artesian Water.
Three handsome, two-story college buildings and the largest Dormitory in South Georgia. Nine expert teachers. Board in private homes only $lO per Month.
Write for illustrated catalog free. Address H. 8. BOWDEN, UNIVERSITY AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. Abbeville, Gft.
(Pale Delicate Women and Girls I
The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the I
system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it I
THE EXPLANATION.
Freshman—“ Did your father cut
your allowance on account of that
lark?"
Sophomore—“No, Indeed; probably
on account of some business miscon
duct of his in the past."—Evening
Sun.
1 John R. Dickey's old reliable eye water
I cures sore eyes or granulated lids. Don’t
hurt, feels good; get the genuine in red box.
GLEEFUL. ’_r
saw her smiting bilsstully,
As at a vision fair; T
wondered why her happiness, r
While long she lingered there,
I was In a large department, store;
And then, as I drew nearer,
saw why she was happy—she
Was looking in a mirror.
—Philadelphia Bulletin.
Ca I’ ud ine Cures Headache,
Whether from Cold, Heat, Stomach, or
Mental Strain. No Acetanihd or dangeroua
s J i9 u ld. Effects immediately.
100., 25c., and 50c., at drug storee
CORRECT.
“They say that laziness is caused
by a germ. What a fine thing it
would be if we could find something
to kill the thing.”
"Oh, no! I know something better
than that. Think how much nicer it
would be if we could all find some
way to gratify it.”—Pick-Me-Up.
t TETTERINE—A RELIABLE CURE.
3 Tettxrine is a sure, safe and speedy cure 1
] for eczema, tetter, skin and scalp diseases
a and Itching piles. Endorsed by physicians;
praised by thousands who have used it.
Y Fragrant, soothing, antiseptic. 50c. at
j druggists or by mail from J. T. Shupthine,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
TO SAVE LABOR.
Make cheese cloth slip- 10r clocJc ’
1 pictures and fancy ai 'R c l es J cover
’ them when you e to sweep ■
your room and much dusting
you are sa v 4 The same set of slips
will last A,r - vears an< l save you many
r hcurjj labor.—Boston Post.
SHE COULD NOT WALK
i
For Months—Burning Humor on
Ankles—Opiates Alorte Brought
Sleep Eczema Yielded to
Cuticura.
“I had eczema for over two years. I bad
two physicians, but they only gave me re
lief for a short time and I cannot enum
erate the ointments and lotions I used to
no purpose. My ankles were one mass of
sores, ’fhe itching and burning were so in
tense that I could not sleep. 1 could not
walk for nearly four months. One day my
husband said T had better try the Cuticura
Remedies. After using them three times,
I had the best night’s rest in months un
less I took an opiate. I used one set of
Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills, and
my ankles healed in a short time. It is
now a year since I used Cuticura, and there
has been no return of the eczema. Mrs. j
David Brown. Locke, Ark., May 18 and 1
-r- IO »»
h’ 1?
lUC
.iiive a walk-over.
SOFT CORNS BETWEEN THE TOES
Are often more painful than the hard ones
on top. Abbott’s east Indian corn paint
will cure either kind,as well as bunions,sore,
callous, spots and indurations of the skin.
“It cures to stay cured.” 25c. at druggists
or by mail. The Abbott Co., Savannah, Ga.
But for free speech some people
wouldn’t talk so freely.
I Fishing In Wheat Fields.
/ The latest fish story of the ye*,
i reached here today, coming fro®
. Goodland, whore It is reported that
F one man returned from a fishing trio
f to the Smoky Hill River with fifty
‘f ' five pounds of fish caught during the
•. I recent high water with a hook and
; j line.
I Many Salinaites caught large num
f : bers of fish during the high water It
, was no unusual sight to see farmers
catching fish in wheat fields, where
t the water was from one to four feet
; deep.—Salina (Kan.) correspondence
- I Kansas City Times.
” THE COMEAND SEE SIGN
y
1-
r
This sign is permanently attached
to the front of the main building of
the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
s Company, Lynn, Mass.
Wlint Does This Sign Mean ?
i It means that public inspection of
the .Liltoratory and methods of
I business is honestly desired. It means
| that there is nothing about the bus
iness which is not “open and above
board.”
It means that a permanent invita
tion is extended to anyone to come
and verify any and all statements
made in the advertisements of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
, Is it a purely vegetable comn2..C l
made from roots and herb” “" ' u '
out drugs ?
Come and Se<> c * • z-
Do the v “*® n °fmenca continu
aU .is much of itas we are told ?
and See.
Was there ever such a person as
Lydia E. Pinkham, and is there any
Mrs. Pinkham now to whom sick
woman are asked to write ?
Come and See.
Is the vast private correspondence
with sick women conducted by
women only, and are the letters kept
strictly confidential ?
Come and See.
Have they really got' letters from
over one million, one hundred
thousand women correspondents ?
Come and See.
Have they proof that Lydia IJ.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has
cured thousands of these women ?
Come and See.
This advertisement is only for
doubters. The great army of women
who know from their own personal
experience that no medicine in the
world equals Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound for female ills
will still 90 on using and being ben
efited by it; but the poor doubting,
suffering woman must, for her oW|i
sake,be taught confidence .for she also
might just as well regain her health.
Curran P A NPUDCr
Troubles PEftIWANENTLY tlr«.
Write at once tor reference, terms, etc. Medicine
with fnll, plain instructionß sent by Express. When
I aj-ties cannot be seen, address
J. M. CURRAN, ■ 167 1-2 Decatur St.
WOOD, IRON AND STEEL
Beltinv racking. Lacing.
LOMBARD COMPANY, AUGUSTA. GA,
PIEDMONT COLLEGE
DEMOREST, GA.
Healthful mountain location. Regular Preparatory
and College courses; special courses in BuaineM,
Domestic Science and Music. Superior advantage*.
Reasonable prices. For catalogue and further infer*
mation address
HENRY C, NEWELL, Acting President
SOropsys
Removes all swelling in 8 to X
days ; effects a permanent cut*
in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment
given free. Nothingcau be fairor
Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sont. •
Specialists, Box b Atlanta. Gr
Take the Place of Calomel
Constipation sends poisonous matter bounding
through the body. Dull headache. Sour Stomach,
Feted Broath. Bleared Eye*. Loss of Energy and Ap*
petite are the surest signs of lie affliction. Young’s
. Liver Pills postivoly euro constipation. They awaken
the sluggish liver to better action, cleanse thp
bowels, strengthen the weakened parts, induce appt
tite and aid digestion. They do not Salivate, no mat*
ter what you eat, drink or do. Price2s cents from
your dealer or direct from
J. M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS. GA.
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and bony
antiseptically clean and free from un
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin.
leering and deodor- (j——
izing toilet requisite ■
of exceptional ex
cellenoe and coon- g jj Q |
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes.
throat and nasal and S j I
uterine catarrh. At |l snPQ'tk jI wB
drug and toilet H 11
stores, 50 cents, or ilfrjß
by mail postpaid. , -j SU W
Large Trial Sample
WITH “HEALTH ANO BEAUTY** BOOK BENT FREE
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mau.
(At-33’08)