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Unique Carving Fork.
The contrivance shown in the ac
companying illustration resembles a
pair of pliers, but it is not. It is a
carving fork which the inventor, a
Michigan man, claims is a great im
provement over the carving forks now
in common use. Again, it might be
mistaken for a pair of scissors, being
of similar construction, witk the ex
ception that when the handles are!
drawn together the shanks still re
main apart. At the end of each
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shank are the prongs. When it is
desired to hold the meat to be carved
the handles are swung apart, causing
the prongs to do likewise. The
shanks are then placed at opposite
sides of the meat and the handles
drawn together. With the aid of this
utensil the meat can be securely held,
the grip increasing in proportion to
the grip exerted upon the handles.
The prongs being prevented from
contracting, they cannot cut or crush
the meat.—Washington Star.
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, GEORGE VON L. MEYER,
T Os Massachusetts. |
Parachute Thrillers.
Among the latest ‘‘thrillers” is the
triple parachute ieap, in which one
aeronaut uses three different para
chutes before reaching earth. He
leaves the balloon in his downward
fiight with a red parachute, but after
falling a short distance liberates it
and makes a second plunge through
space with a white parachute. This
lt‘eun is repeated again after another
drop, and he finally lands with a blue
parachute.
Another “thriller” is a double par-’
achute leap from the same balloon,
in which a man and woman race to
earth in parachutes which fall 500 or
600 feet before opening out.—Popur
lar Mechanics.
Hardy Newspaper Men.
In forty-eight years no editor has
been received as a patient at the
Longview Hospital, of Cincinnati, and
only one reporter. In that time the
hospital has treated 2159 housewives,
1264 laborers, 553 domestic servants,
580 other servants, 305 farmers, 249
clerks, 141 carpenters, 136 mer
chants, 135 tailors, 131 painters, 136
shoemakers, 89 cigarmakers, 78
salesmen, 75 machinists, 64 cabinet
makers, 58 teamsters, 55 butchers, 52
bakers, 49 coopers, 48 saloon keep
ers, 47 soldiers, 46 school teachers,
42 printers, 39 lawyers, 30 physi
cians, 30 firemen and 28 policemen,
| —Boston Transcript.
e e
! Shows World’s Advancement.
f Methodist ministers in the United
| States are to-day preaching in more
' | Janguages, it is said, than were used
; after the miracle of Pentecost.
L
| Owing to a shortage in smali coins
| seven tons of pennies were turned out
in a single day by an English mint.
it the Fono Feloa}
AN ~o Al
NS )
( S\ P\ Mg
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Misleading. :
This world could call full many a bluff
And run more nearly right,
If honest men were not so gruff )
And crooks not so polite. A
n———— | i /
Lesser Bvil, ?
The Professor—“l want you chils
dren to go to my lecture to-night.”
Robert—*“Couldn’t you whip us ins
stead, just this once, papa?"—Life.
On the Contrary.
Eph Green—"Ah desires to purs
chase ah razzer.”
Clerk—*" Safety?”
Eph Green—*No, sah; dis am fo'
social usage.”—Harper's Weekly.
It Gives Him a Rest.
“Every year the Higgs have Mrs.
Jones up to their country home for g
long visit.”
“Fond of her, are they?” |
“No—of him.”—Harper's Bazar.
Nobody Would.
Newton had just discovered the law
of gravitation.
“But I wouldn’t be a bit surprised
if the Supreme Court declares it un
constitutional,” he mused, soberly.—
Puck.
A Hard Job.
She—*“l wish you would work and
earn the money for the flowers you
send me.”
He—*lf you knew how hard it was
to work the governor you would think
I earned 'em.”’—Wasp.
New to the Game,
“Waiter, is this supposed to be
coffee?” inquired the diner in the
Rapidity Case.
“I couldn’t say,” replied the waiter.
“I only started here this morning.”
—Harper's Weekly.
A VWise Daddy.
Young Aspirant—*“Sir, may I count
on your supporting me?”
Practical Citizen—*“That depends,
young man. Are you going to run for
office or do you want to marry my
daughter?"—Philadelphia Ledger.
Famiiy Pride.
R
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N e G
“My father once had his picter
took.”
“So did mine, but it took four cops
to hold him.”—Brooklyn Life.
A Good Man.
“Your dead husband wor a good
mon,” declared the sympathetic Mrs.
Casey to the bereaved widow.
“He wor!” exclaimed Mrs. Murphy,
dashing the tears from her eyes. “No
two polacemin cud handle him."—
Judge.
Keeping His Word.
Mrs. Fogarty (in fashionable res
taurant)—"*Now, fer goodness sake,
Mike, don’t order Irish stew.”
Mr. Fogarty—*“All right, I won’t,
dear. Waither, fetch me ayther some
Hibernian Suey, or Celtic Goulash!”
—Puck.
Sufficient Reason.
Bing—*"Yes; that’s old Spriggings.
Half a dozen doctors have given him
up at various times during his life.”
Wing—" What was the matter with
bim?2?”
Bing—*“He wouldn't pay his bills.”
—Tit-Bits.
A Synonym.
“Yes,” boasted a dissipated cosmo
politan, “I've been in a good many
tight places in my life.”
“Tight places,” mused an acquaint
ance. “'That’s a new name for them.”
“A new name for what?”
‘““Public houses.'—Tit-Bits.
When Adam Delved.
Adam had just been condemned to
live by the sweat of his brow. {
“Never mind,” he sneered. *“Wait
till they come around for the labor
vote.”
Herewith they doubted whether
they had taken him down a peg or
not.—New York Sun.
l A Strong Blufl.
First Stranger—" Excuse me, but
I that’s my umbrella you have.”
Second Stranger—*“l don’t doubt
it. Just wait here till I call a police
man.”
First Stranger—*What for?”
Second Stranger—* Burglars broke
into my house the other night and
le’p this umbrelia. "—Chicago News.
Cause FFor Anxiety.
The bhaby was slow about talking,
and his aunt was deploring that fact,
Four-vear-old Elizabeth listened anxe
iously.
“01, mother,” she ventured at
length, “do you think he’ll grow up
English? We couldn’t any of us un
derstand him if he turned out to be
French.”
7o R eP SR P GO g RO LS et S A S
ALMOST A MIRACLE. |,
/ i : 1
Raised Up When Science Said There |
i/ Was No Hope. i ]
G. W. L. Nesbitt, Depot Street,
Marion, Ky., writes: *“I was a chronic |
U invalid with kidney |
£ J troubles and often
] A wished death might |
o A end my awful suffer- |
SSO b ings. The secretions |
\J,.‘;s. were thick with sedi- |
‘\@;;h ment, my limbs swol- |
G\ ek, len and my right side
\\ 9 so nearly paralyzed I
RGN could not raise my
hand above my head. The doctor
held out no hope of my recovery and
I had given up, but at last started |
using Doan’s Kidney Pills and made
a rapid gain. After three months’
use 1 was well and at work again.”
Sold by all dealers. 5C cents a bozx.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Happinesg and marriage, Cordelia,
are not always synonymous.
BUYING PAINT BLINDLY.
‘ Many people look upon paint buy
ing as a lottery and so it is, the way
they do it. It is not necessarily so,
however. Pure White Lead and lin
seed oil are the essential elements of
good paint. Adulterants in white
lead can be easily found by the use of
a blowpipe. Adulterations in linseed
oil can be detected with a fair degree
of certainty. See that these two ele
ments are pure and properly put on
and the paint will stay put.
National Lead Company, Wood
bridge Building, New York City, will
send a blowpipe outfit and instruc
l tions for testing both white lead and
| linseed oil, on request.
It's very easy to be happy; all you
have to dp is to be foolish.
A SPLENDID COFFEE.
Ymzianne Possesses Fine Flavor, Su
perior Quality, and Perfect Purity.
We are pleased to call the attention of
our readers to the ‘splendid merits of
LuziaNNE COFFEE, put us by that enter
rising firm, the REILY- 'AYLOR Co., of
glew Srleans. This coffee is of fine flavor,
superior quelity, and cseriect purity. It 18
blended and prepar according to the
methods employed by the best Creole cooks
| for more than fifty years, and when you
drink LUZIANNE, you are drinking a coffee
that has made New Orleans famous the
| world over. What makes this the best
| coffee for the family of moderate means, 18
the fact that it has twice the strenfth of
ordinary coffee, requiring only half the
usual quantity in the making, and its price
is very moderate, indeed; considering its
uality, it is the most economical of any on
(t‘he market. .
LUZIANNE has a tremendous sale thmugh
out the South. More than fifty orders for
carload lots, averaging 30,000 Ibs. each,
have been filled within the past year.
Coffee being the most important article
of food on the breakfast table, it 15'\‘\'ell
| to have the very best to be obtained. That
is why we commend to our readers this
splendid and satisfying brand. :
Notwithstan(liing Itst high grade quahtiv,
- beautiful presents are given away to
npi?r!:'i)asers of thli)s splendid coffee simply to
advertise it. The coupon, In every cam,
tells you all about it.
Always call for LUZIANNE when you
buy coffee.
Many a woman marries for money
because she can't think of any other
excuse.
: Hicks’ Capudine Cures Headache,
" | Whether from Cold, Heat, Stomach, or
Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous
| drugs. It's Liquid. Effects immediately.
10ec., 25¢., and 50c¢., at drug stores.
An Apple Fifty Years old.
Mrs. Ellen Togqthaker of South
! Harpswell has a keepsake, an apple
- | that was thrown to her in a kindly
manner by a young man while she
» | was returning from the Baptist
) | church one Sunday afternoon fifty
| years ago. She picked up the ap
ple took it home and filled it with
cloves and today it is very small, but
well preserved. That young man is
" | seventy-five years of age, and had
» | forgotten the incident until Mrs. Too
thaker related it to him one evening.
» | —Kennebec Journal.
) Wa e T
p: v
A cork carried to a depth of 200
feet below the surface of the sea
will not rise again owing to the great
pressure of water.
: . Sk RT e
TETTERINE—A RELIABLE CURE.
| TETTERINE is & sure, safe and speedy cure
for eczema, tetter, skin and socalp diseases
and {tehing piles. Endorsed by physlcians;
; raised by thousands who have used it.
Bmgruxt, soothing, antlsegflc. 50c. at
druggists or by mail from J. T. BRUPTBINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
: If a skeleton had three feet would 1t
.| a bone yard?
GARFIELD
! Digestive Tablets, |
From your druggist, or the Garfield Tea
Co.. Brooklyn, N. Y., 25c. per bottle.
Samples upon request.
IN MELODRAMA.
) Knightly Hero—l say, oid chap,
| that lady's glove episode makes a
- | great hit.
. Admiring Super—Yes, sir, you're al
ways sure of a hand on that—Balti
» | more American.
Free Cure for Rheu
matism, Bone Pain
‘ and Eczema
' Botanic Blood Balm (B. B B.) cures the worst
cases of Rheumatism. bone pains. swollen
'_ muscles and joints, by purifying the blood
Thousands of cases cured by B. B. B. after
> all other treatments failed. Price SI.OO per
large bottle at diug stores, with complete
directions for home treatment Large sample
free by writing Biood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
) e ————————————————————————————————————————
‘Go,oooValueGi'venAwa .'_», [
THERACYCLE 3315 st 2roeecs 00l
Joss strain on chaln, it runs and climbe AT 3
hills easter than other bieyoles. Is the BV \"
largest seiling hlgh»%ndowheel in the - \"
| world. Willlastalifetime. Wemake no FENEN 41\ l’.
cheap RACYCLES but youe‘hn cet“y:mrr“ '}}-fi !"‘i
| ATFACTORY PRICES 2 s oet
Jog and pamphlet sent FREE. 11 tells about the \W/ANM
RAOYCRE and how to get the $60,000. A ‘
WANUFACTURERS OF THE RACYCLE, MIDDLETOWN, O.
DRR b SRR Lo o g ST RN L e S gt - A TR 19y aktyte TSRS
2lor more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One loc. package colors all fibers. They dye Jn cold water better than any other dye. You
w 2 dye any garrent without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Lye, Bleacn and Mix Colors. MONROE DR UG CO.. Quincy, lllinels
ms,'swmumncemmmmm
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve |
Restorer, $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr, H. R, Kline, Ld.,981 Arch St., Phila., Pa. |
The inventor of the noiseless gun ..
could further endear himself to city
cewellers by inventing a noiseless fire- =
cracker and a noiseless hand organ. |
— ‘
REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIN. |
ABBOTT'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT removes |
corns, root and all, without cutting or burn- |
‘ing and leaves no soreness. It cures soft !
corns between the toes, bunions or sore, |
callous spots. It cures all quick and per
manent. Get it at your druggists or gend
95¢. to THE ABBorT Co., Savannah, Ga. i
If it wasn’t for Sunday school pic-:
nics ants apid bugs wouldn't (have |
much fun. |
CURES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS, |
Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: ‘I have had |
eezema on my hands for 12 years, and have
tried everrhing. I have been using TET
rERINE 4 days and the results are great.”
Signed, Mrs. M. Harvey. TETTERINE i 8 the
surest, safest, speediest cure for eczema
e & o P Tel e R S A R e
and all other skin diseases. Sold by drug- |
gista or sent by mail for 50¢. by J.T. Saup-
TeINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. ‘
There are always a lot of people try-.
ing to dodge the man who thinks he |
can tell a funny story,
FIFTEEN YEARS OF SUFFERING.
Burning, Painful Sores on Legs—Tor- 3
tured Day and Night—Tried Many
Remedies to No Avail—Used |
Cuticura; Is Well Again, |
“After an attack of rheumatism, running
sores broke out on my husband’s legs, from
below the knees to the ankles, There are
no words to tell all the discomfort and
great suffering he had to endure night and
day. He used every kind of remedy and
three physicians treated him, one after the
other, without any good results whatever.,
| One day I ordered some Cuticura Soap,
Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resol
. vent. He began to use them and in three
weeks all the sores were dried up. The
burning fire stopped, and the pains became
bearable. After three months he was quite
" well. I can prove this testimonial at any
time. Mrs. V. V. Albert, Upper French
ville, Me., July 21, 1907.”
A sensible man attracts less atten
tion than ocne who hasn’t any sense.
The hands of the housewife will be
kept soft and white and free from all
chap, redness or roughness if borax is
used.
There ig a lot of extravagant lan
guage in some brands of free speech.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
tgething.soft,qnsthegums.rgiuucesinflamma
tion, allays_'pflxj,_c_uflr_es wind colic, 25ca bottle
! Many an able seaman has found it
rough sailing on the sea of matrimo
ny.
P B Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial
: BOWEL el Never fails to relieve at once. It is th% favorite baby medicine of
Bl TROUBLES [BE L 5300 thon friends 15 sive eto Ohlaren fox Colie, Drsbnsersy
rr— . Cramps, Diarrhoea, Flux, Foul-Stomach and all Stomach and _Bowet
f cHILDREN Ase o e e
TEETHING HALTIWANGER TAYLOR DRUG CO., Atlanta, Gz |
. Pt CURES STOMACH-ACHE IN TEN MINUIES
o It does not make you sick like
4 calomel, but I 8 quick, thorough and
gentle in its ection.
@
=T EA Puts ithe Sluggish Liver to Work
TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer for it
Biee e T e =
oa A~ MADE
W\ \\‘ f;':n\ -l
Wb A8 SERVICE
‘\.\QJ‘)’ and guaranteed
WLT77~ WATERPROOR
\g\\v : <OWERS
Iy !ml
[ OILED SUITS, SLICKERS
AND HATS ¢
BT T
Suits 3329 Slickers s32°
N, JOLD BY BEST DEALERS EVERTWHIRE
w = CATALOS FREC FOR TRE ASKING
e e 20, BONT Tesonee wan
THE DUTCH ;’ :
_BOY PAINTER \ é&i
STANDS FOR s @
PAINT QUALITY Ze&iA
IT IS FOUND ONLY ON :’Vj"‘r
PURE WHITE LEAD {3l 28 34
MADE 8Y "7‘
QIEEIDUTCH o.E
PROCESS.
DOVE-TAILED PUTTY LOCK SASHE
No bullder osn afford to nse the old @
kind when he can get the Putty Lock §§
i Sash just 2s cheap. For sale by ‘:
» M'f'g Bash, Doors |
§ Randall Bros., ‘:E‘égg%i g
5 R ™ FRSEEERTTE
: PPSONRY TT T ERTERET ISR > 0 BN
WA e Ve . s g & "’x‘
; vas B % g B. T G 4 & £ BN
9 \ 4 A W ; & 4 5
IR (L 9
OIS Lunef] AR Sy
: B/ SHOES AT ALL el LS ;
ok PRICES, FOR EVERY EA A e . X
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY, N e, N >
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. 2 M =+
BW. L. Douglas makes and selis moro@ 0 AR NS Y
men’s $2.80, $3.00 and $3.50 shoes VRN T = e J
. than any other m:anufacturer in the R e ’), 5
BeS™ world, because they hold thel="T% ’S€ S/ Fast
Blrapel fit smw.'m:; lonm&%d G \ 2255 Color
are o er value than a 5~ 3% Ny 228 Y Eyel
Rar shoes in the world so-day. - &8 RS .l'svefi:”
W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price s
fi’i'rf;'}»";r"“if‘ d“"l L. Dong'as name and price is stamped on ho:t(om. v'l‘nk:f?f}:; er":“l‘“‘ull‘:;
Sol¢ @ bes o des Sev her nailed TaACto! any Tt 0 orid. !
trated Catalog :':ei' to an(;'qatir«;lr‘c‘s:.ryw“.e‘ Ehoes n‘lm\’}'f.n.’li‘t lr\l‘t‘)( FG?LAS.N Brockton, Mars.
NATURE
AND A WOMAN'S WORK
2 o ®<] K
s i Y
R o y
g P
Y
D \ ':,\Q ) > 4
> ; 'l(.\&\‘* &
LYDIA E. PINKHAM
' Nature and a woman’s work come
bined have produced the grandest
remedy for woman’s ills that the
| world has ever known.
| In the good old-fashioned days of
- our grandmothers they relied upon
| the roots and herbs of the field to
| cure disease and mitigate suffering.
| The Indians on our Western
~ Plains to-day can produce roots and
herbs for every ailment, and cure
" diseases that baffle the most skilled
physicians who have spent years in
' the study of drugs.
| From the roots and herbs of the
field Lydia E. Pinkham more than
thirty years ago gave to the women
of the world a remedy for their pe
culiar ills, more potent and effica
cious than any combination of drugs,
| Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound is now recognized as the
standard remedy for woman’s ills.
. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St,
| Louisiana, Mo., writes: ,
!« Complete restoration to health
means so much to me that for the sake
-of other suffering women lam willing
to make my troubles public.
“‘¥or twelve years I had been suffer
' ing with the worst forms of female ills.’
| During that time I had eleven different
, physicians without help. No tongue
can tell what I suffered, and at times I
could hardly walk. About two years
_ ago ] wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice,
1 followed it, and can truly say that
. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Coms=
pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re
! stored health and strength. It is
. worth mountains of gold to suffering
women.” &
t What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veges
- table Compound did for Mrs. Muff,.
it will do for other suffering women.-
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from une
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin- @
fecting and deodor- A~--—-I
izing toiletrequisite EMM A EHA
of exceptional ex- e,
cellence and econ- pr."NE g
omy. Invaluable Croif St 77
for inflamed eyes, B remees- )
throatandnasaland {fi ZSe W 4
uterine catarrh. At ’ o ‘} 8
" drug and toilet . @ R J! .
stores, 50 cents, or § ‘ HiHl>
by mail postpaid. Eon T J’(‘
Large Trial Sample S/
WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY' BOOK SENT FRER
THE PAXTON TOILET COO., Boston, Mass,
o CURED
8 >y Gives
F mpd Quick
5 N Relief.
- AN, Removes all swelling in Bto2e
3 T days; effects a permanent cure
4 : in 30to 60 days. Trialtreatmeng
¢ ~..‘, B givenlfre[e). ;\;‘o:gix&gcan;:esgix:d
DA SRR Wit r. H. H. Green ™
Q«\ ey Sneclal?fls. Box B Atlanta, Ge-
SAVE THE CARTON TOPS
and Soap Wrappers from 9
i
20 Mule Team Borax
Products and exchange them for
VALUABLE PREMIUMS FREE
40-page illustrated catalogue of 100€@
articles given away FREE. Address
PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO., New York,
(Atl9-'08)