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TIRED AND SICK
YET MUST WORK
“Man may work from sun to sun
but woman's work is never done,’’
In order to keep the home neut
and pretty, the children well dressed
and tidy, women overdo and often
suffer in silence, drifting along from
bad to worse, knowing well that
they ought to hav? help to overcome
the pains and aches which daily
make lifts a burden.
It is to these women that Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
made from native roots and herbs,
comes as a blessing. When the spir
its are depressed, the head and back
aches, there are dragging-down pains, nervousness, sleeplessness, and
reluctance to go anywhere, these are only symptoms which unless
heeded, are coon followed by the worst forms of Female Complaints.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
keeps the feminine organism ina strong and healthy condition. Itcures
Inflammation, Ulceration, displacements, and organic troubles. In
preparing for child-birth and to carry women safely through the Change
of Life it is most eflicient.
Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl, Pa., writes:— Dear Mrs. Pink- M
ham:—“For a long time I suffered from female troublesand had all kinds B
of aches and pains in the lower part of back and sides. I could not M
sleep and had no appetite. Since taking- Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ■
Compound and following the advice which you gave me I feel like a a
new woman and I cannot praise your medicine too highly.’’
Mrs. Pinkham’s Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to |
write Mrs Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Out of her vast volume of ex- g
perience she probably has the very knowledge that will help your |
case. Her advice is free and always helpful.
kA &AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
SWEETiBLOODHOUNDIGORN I
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3 -Sil I
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J'The Original “Break Plug” Tobacco. The Only “Adver-?
3 tised Brand’ of North Carolina Flue-Cured Tobacco £
J. Showing a GAIN EVEKY YEAR since introduced. *
| “IMITATED IN STYLE BUTNOT IN SHEW” I
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MALSBY COMPANY,
41 S. FOR ,ITH ST., ATLANTA, GA..
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is■ ■■ * 1/
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i%V- :Y.
Matwfactas of and Dealers in til Kinds of
MACHINE^
AND SUPPLIE S.W
Portable, Stationary and Traction Engine*.
Saw Mills And Grist Mills. Wood working nnd^H
«!e Mill Machinery. Complete line carried inVHB|
’Write for catalogue prices. Address all comm^T
tlons to Atlanta. Ga. We have no connectic^M)
Jacksonville. Fla. 11
For health j
: : Economy
Results
Snowdrift
w Hogless Lard j
Many a man thinks he's putting up
a strong argument when in reality he
is only making a loud noise.
~ HICKS’
OfIMIW
CURES >
AL. L ACHES
Aud Nervousness
- Trial Lottie If- AWrugitoroi
—HirnnfTTr • - - — - . — —
. : 7 HERE’S AN EXAMPLE
°f w ^ at P lant foods can do f° r
farmers. The picture on the
S tight shows plant development
and potato yield (55.8 lbs.) of
1 a small patch, treated with '
^.potashW.
On the left, a patch of
_ same size (yield 21 lbs.)
I planted at same time, in
■ same soil, but untreated.
■ These pictures are taken
from an experiment sta-
---S3 tion bulletin, compiled in Sv-^ ■■ '
Our Free Book, “Profitable Farming”
B which gives authentic and authoritative accounts of experiments and
I actual results of practical and scientific farming. It is invaluable to
g the farmer who is anxious to improve his products and who is work-
B ing for a wider margin of profits. Send for it to-day.
GERMAN KALI WORKS
B New York, 93 Nassau St., or Atlanta, Ga., 1224 Candler Bldg.
I
1 EH T,UG»U< W Av
i
' a powder that
y° u miv with cold water and
waa apply with a brush.
It is sanitary, it is durable, it
WA is beautiful, it is economical, it
, is easily applied.
Decorate your owu walls, get
more sunshine in your home,
, KM make your home more cheer-
WjM ful, it costs so little.
- It your dealer can’t fur-
nish you we will. Freight
KSte charges prepaid on all or-
ders for ■‘*-5.00 or more,
S&ggft (enough for 4 rooms.)
Write for color card, 14
1 different tints.
। F & M GEORGIA PAINT
* K W & GLASS Co °
gi
SFaWpsoii’s^
I Any man who flirts with trouble is
i apt to have a breach-o£-promise suit
on his hands sooner or later.
*
I Itch cured in 30 minutes bv IVoolford’a
Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Drug
? -ists. Mail orders promptly filled bv Dr.
5 E. DetchonMed.Ce.,&awfordsville,lnd. sl.
Os all men sailors suffer most from rheu
■ matism.
To recover quickly from bilious attacks,
sick-headache, indigestion or colds, take
i Garfield Tea, the mild laxative. Guaran
teed under the Pure Food and Drugs law.
Even failure may be spoiled by suc
i cess.
PEARLS OF THOUGHT.
The best preparation for the fjture
is the present well seen to. —George
MacDonald.
The man conquers who sees provi
dences where another sees nothing —
H. Clay Trumbull.
The men who succeed best in public
life are those who take the risk of
standing by their own convictions, —J.
A. Garfield.
I have learned that when men say
a thing is impossible, the time has
come for carrying it immediately into
effect. —Dr. William Wright.
The tree of fame is an inconvenient
ly tall tree; the trunk of it is abomi
nably smooth, too, affording very lit
tle foothold to the climber. —Lucas
Malet,
To occupy ourselves with little
things as with great, to be fit and
ready for the one as for the other, is
not. weakness and littleness, but pow
er and sufficiency.—Joubert.
Give us to awake with smiles,’give
us to labor smiling. As the sun light
ens the world, so let. our loving kind
ness make bright the homes of our
habitation. —R. L. Stevenson.
Never shrink from deep decotion
because you fear its trials or its sac
rifices. Paul, in martyrdom, was un
speakably happier than God’s half
hearted servants. —W. R. Huntington.
Good temper is fruitful in happy
fancies, in fair vistas, in hopes and
plans of pleasure. Good temper is to
the pleasures of man what imagina
tion is to the fine arts —delights in
them, loves, multiplies, creates theny
—Joubert.
We are born fo.r a higher destiny
than that' of earth; there is a realm
where the rainbow never fades, where
the stars will be spread before us like
islands that slumber on the ocean, anti
where the beings that pass before u$
like shadows will stay in our presence
forever. —BulWer-Lytton.
I have lived to know that the great
secret of human happiness' is this:
Never suffer your energies' to stag
nate. The old .adage, “Too many
irons in the fire,” conveys an abom
inable-falsehood. You- cannot have
too many. Poker, tongs and all —i
keep them . all going!—Dr. Adams|
Clarke.
MERELY A MASTERPIECE.
Not a “Message” In Lovely Diction
for the Junior Manager. i
A man who wanted to lecture called ’
at a bureau presided over by two man
agers.
Me aroused their interest with a lec
turer's art, says-the I.yceumite, but
unfortunately the senior-member was
just starting on a-trip and would not
return for at -least a month.
The senior partner called the young
man to one side and exacted a solemn
promise that he would not Visit an
other bureau nor lead bis lecture to
anybody until after be had given this
particular manager -a reading and a
chance to make him an offer a month
hence. '
The interest o; .he .un’or member,
however, was at wl.i e heat, : nd he
kept sending lor the young lecturer,
insisting that he come down to the of
fice and read his lee tire. Th? joung
man refused with as mmh tact as pos
sible, but this only increus d the anx
iety of the junior.
•At last the ycurg m. n to'd cf the
promise made the senior partner, in
stead cf quieting the junior manager,
the announcement made him only the
more anxious, and finally the young
man consented.
The reading ended, the junior part
ner, said;
“Now your, doing this has saved us
alt much valuable time. I'll tell you
frankly, my boy, it won’t do. There’s
no message in it, it is loosely con
structed, the diction is poor. It won't
do. Burn it and try again."
. When the senior partner returned,
he called up the young lecturer and
soundly berated him for breaking
faitli:
“How do I kilow you have not been
to every bureau in town? You prom
ised me on your honor you would
read the lecture to nobody—not even
to my parti'Ar.”
The young man protested that lie had
not done so.
“Why!” exclaimed the senior man
ager, “of course you have. He tells
me that you came down here to the
office two weeks ago and read him the
entire lecture, and that he told you it
was no good!”
“Yes,” replied the young man. “after
much persuasion I did read him a lec
ture which he told me was no good,
but it was not my lecture, it was Wen
dell Phillips’ 'Lost Arts’!”
Better Militia Riflemen.
One of the most gratifying signs of
the times is the evidence of a general
recognition of the uselessness of a
militia untrained to shoot and of a
general purpose to acquire proficiency
in whdt is an absolutely indispensable
feature of military training and one
of the me,st important of all. Nothing
should be left undone, in way of or
ganizing rifle teams and holding com
petitions, to stimulate and make good
this purpose and to encourage not
only the members of volunteer mili
tary organizations but the able-bodied
citzen everywhere to learn to use a
gun. We are now happily at peace
with one another and with the world.
But no nation knows when it may be
called forth to war, and the men who
will win its battles are the men wha
nut snoot to kill.” —Providence Trib
une and Telegraph.
Germany bought of the United States
In 1905 $69,924,400 worth of cotton and
$31,987,200 worth of copper.
I RATTLED.
Jack—“ Too bad about young Ney,
isn’t it?”
Tom—“ What about him?"
Jack—“He was sent to the Insane
asylum last week.”
I Tom—“ You don’t say! What was the
cause of It?”
Jack—“He undertook to study Greek
and Shorthand at the same time and
got the characters mixed.” —Chicago
News.
FITS,St. Vitns’Dance :Nervon»Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. S 2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 ArcbSt.. Phila.. Pa.
Perhaps the world isn't as bad as
the people who talk about it.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cnred
With LOCAL applications,as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a
blood or constitutional disease, anti in order
t.i cure it you must take internal remedies.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood arid mucous sur
face. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack
medicine, it was pi escribed by one of the
best physicians us this country for years,
and is a regular prescription, it is composed
of the best tonics known,combined with the
best blood purifiers, acting directly on the
mucous surfaces. The perfect combination
of the two ingredients is what produces
such wonderful results in curing catarrh,
bend for testimonials, free.
F. ,1. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
bold by druggists, price, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills foi_constipaiion.
A good-hearted man carries part of
it in his pocketbook.
Garfield Tea, nature's remedy for a tor
pid, inactive or disordered liver; for con
stipation, sick-headache, indigestion.
Jig Dancing Keeps Him Young.
If you wish to become a nonagenar
ian then dance a little every morning
just before breakfast.
This tonic is advanced by Alter'
Silberman, ninety-one years old, an
inmate of the Home of the Daughters
of Jacob, situated on lower East
Broadway. Silbermann for years has
been dancing from ten to fifteen min
utes every morning before breakfast.
He declares that dancing- is the great
est exercise in the world.
“Dancing puls more ambition into
a man and makes him more cheerful
and happier,” said the white-bearded
patriarch yesterday, after he danced
the “Kotzatski,” which is a famous
Russian dance.
Silberman came to this country
years ago. He was wealthy at one
time, but lost his fortune in specula
tion. He has been at the Home of
the Daughters of Jacob for years.
“My advice to the younger genera
tion is | that they should dance every
morning -before breakfast and also just
before Retiring,” he said.—New York
American.
STRIKING AN AVERAGE.
Bacon —According to an expert In
phrenology, the average adult head
Ithas a circumference of fully 22 inches.
Egbert.—l guess that average is all
right. Some nights my head is 16
inches and some mornings it is 28
inches.—k-Yonkers Statesman.
4
| M(J>RE BOXES OF GOLD
Alud Many Greenbacks.
325 bortes of Gold and Greenbacks
viil! be sent to persons who write the
most interesting and truthful letters
>£ experience on the following topics:
1. Ho|w have you been affected by
toffee drinking and by changing from
hoffee to Postuni.
2. Give name and-account of one
br more coffee drinkers who have
been hurt by* it and have been in
duced to quit and use Postum.
3. Do you know any one who has
been driven away from Postum be
cause it came to the table weak and
characterless at the first trial?
4. Did you set such a person right
rjegarding the easy way to make it
Rear, black, and with a snappy, rich
taste?
.5. Have you ever found a better
Hay to make it than to use four heap
tog teaspoonfuls to the pint of water,
lit stand on stove until real boiling
begins, and beginning at that time
wfien actual boiling starts, boil full
ij minutes more to extract the flavor
aijid food value. (A piece of butter
the size of a pea will prevent boiling
over.) This contest is confined to
those who have used Postum prior to
the date of this advertisement.
Be honest and truthful, don't write
poetry or, fanciful letters, just plain,
truthful statements.
Contest will close June Ist, 1907,
and no letters received after that date
will be admitted. Examinations of
letters will be made by three judges,
noli members of the Postum Cereal
Co;, Ltd. Their decisions will be fair
and final, and a neat little box con
taining a $lO gold piece sent to each
of the five writers of the most inter
esting letters, a box containing a $5
gold piece to each of the 20 next best,
a $2 greenback to each of the 100
nexlt best, and a 81 greenback to each
of the 200 next best, making cash
prizes distributed to 325 persons.
Every friend of Postum is urged to
write and each letter will be held in
high esteem by the company, as an
evidence of such friendship, while the
little boxes of geld and envelopes ot
money will reach many modest
writers whose plain and sensible let
ters contain the facts desired, al
though the sender may have but
small faith in winning at the time o£
writing.
Talk this subject ever with your
friends and see how many among you
can win prizes. It is a good, honest
competition and in the best kind ot
a cause, and costs the competitors ab
solutely nothing.
Address your letter to the Postum
Cereal Co., Ltd.. Battle Creek, Mich.,
writing .your own name and address
clearly.
The Wilburn House
Macon Georgia,
is a Modern First-class Hotel conveni- j
ently locacted. Nicely furnished. Service,J
the best. Table unexcelled.
Rates on Application.
T - .A.. STxLITTL, Proprietress.
Enlarge your Account
and Extend ^our Credit;
h
"Getting on in the world” mean s frugality plus a good, bank account, J
ANY BANK ACCOUNT
is Better than None.
The small beginning often ripen, s out into the account of greatest ;
moment. To “enlarge your account” bank here. The prestige and con
servatism of this bank will be of u ntold value to you as a depositor.
We've had fourteen years experience in banking.
CAPITAL STOCK $50,003 ‘
SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PRO FITS 50,000
STOCKHOLDERS’ LIABILITY 50,000
TOTAL .$150,000 j
'
BAmcme COMPANY.
STAIE DEPOSITORY. fl
T. J. PRITCHETT, Pres. W. W. ROBINSON, V. Pres.
, JAS. M. FINN, Cashier. 3. B. FORDHAM, Asst. Cashier I J
Cotton Factors
405-407 POPLAR ST., MACON, GEORGIA.
Best weight and highest prices guaranteed
DEALERS IN
FERTILIZES WAGONS. ,
BUGGIES AND HARNESS HORS
Farm wagons a specml^s^^
Famous EllwcaH
WIRE FENCING
- 58 INCH
■ 'frowwwA —1
fl
'WWwvWWwWra^Wv^'Wt
INCM
a x.xxxx/^jyyyym |Nai
FOB SALE BY-
MACK DUGGAN
• Sandersville, Georgia.
Tripp Hotel
C. M. TRIPP, Proprietor.
DUBLIN, GA.
Sells Mules, Buggies, Wagons.
HORSE SWAPPPING A SPECIALTY.
THE WILLETT HOTEL
.’.Mrs. E. W. CLAY, Proprietress.*.
TOOMSBORO GA.
a
Newly Furnished. Special attention to Traveling Men.
MACON BOTTLING WORKS,
E. J. BURKE, Proprietor,
o maufactureks of o
Flat Rock Ginger Ale
SOIDA. SELTZER,
Lithia Mineral Waters
WA-LI-i TS jFKtOlSr±] 3