The Aiken recorder. [volume] (Aiken, S.C.) 1881-1910, January 07, 1907, Image 4
1
s I
SHOULD WE SLEEP LONGERT
?0>lc >!<£*£<£
Does Whai
Other Stores
Fail to Do
In almost every houpe there is
a room that the heat from the
other stoves or furnace fails to
reach. It may be a room on
— the “weather” side, or one having no heat
connection. It may be a cold hallway. No mat
ter in what part of the house-—whether room or
hallway—it can soon be made snug and cozy with a
PERFECTION
Oil Heater
(Equipped with Smokeless Device)
Unlike ordinary oil heaters the Perfection gives satisfaction
always. First and foremost it is absolutely safe—you cannot
turn the wick too high or too low. Gives intense heat without
smoke or smell because equipped with smokeless device.
Can be easily carried from room to room. As easy,
to operate as a lamp. Ornamental as well as useful.
Made in two finishes—nickel and japan. Brass oil fount
beautifully embossed. Holds 4 quarts of oil and burns 9
hours. There’s real satisfaction in a Perfection Oil Heater.
Every heater warranted. If not at your dealer’s write our
nearest agency for descriptive circular.
The
_R&yb Lamp
makes the home bright.
Is the safest and best lamp
for all-round household
use. Gives a clear, steady
light. Fitted witn latest
Improved burner. Made of brass throughout and nickel plated.
Every lamp warranted. Suitable for library, diuing room,
■ bedroot -
parlor or 1
jm. If not at your dealer’s write to nearest agency.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
WHAT DID SHE MEAN.
The Single One—I am a great lover
of dogs.
The Married One—It seems strange
If you have such a great liking for
dogs that you never got married! —
Yonkers Statesman.
an
NO RELIEF FOR 15 YEARS.
A GOOD PATIENT.
First Physician—Has ho got
hereditary trouble?
Second Physician—Yes. I hope to
hand hi» case down to mjr son.”—
Harper’s Bazar.
All Sorts of Remedies Failed to Cure
Eczema—Sufferer Tried Cuticura
and is Entirely Cured.
“I have had eczema for over fifteen
years, and have tried all sorts of remedies
to relieve me, but without avail. 1 stated
my ease to one of my friends and he
recommended the Cuticura Remedies. 1
bought them with the thought that they
would be unsuccessful, as with the others.
But after using them for a few weeks 1
noticed to my surprise that the irritation
and peeling of the skin gradually de
creased, and finally’, after using five cakes
of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuti
cura Ointment it disappeared entirely. 1
feel now like a new man, and 1 would
gladly recommend these remedies to all
who are afHicted with skin diseases. David
Blum, Box A, Bedford Station, N. Y. f
Nov. 0, 1905.”
A man who can make the world be
lieve he is a genius is really a genius.
State cr Oeio, ( ity of Toledo, I
Lucas Couxtt. j **•
1 bank i hkney makes oath that he is
fenior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney ,fe
< o., dofng business in the City of Toledo
< oimty and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of one hcxdbed dol-
i ahs /or each and every case of catarrh
that cannot bs cured bv'the use of Hall’s
tATARBH Cure. Frank J. Cheney.
.V.voru to before me and subscribed in my
I presence, this 6th day of Deee n-
( REAL. !• ber, A.D., 1S36.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reduces! nflamnue
Uon. allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c a hot tie
Almost 157J0O women work about
the mines in the German empire.
A Useless Art,
"Well,” said the manager, turning
to the fair applicant for a place in
his company, “have you any dia
monds that you can lose on a rail
road train or be robbed of on a ferry
boat ?”
"No, I’m sorry to say that I do
not own any jewelry.”
"Is there anybody that we can have
arrested for following you around
from town to town and making lovo
to you?”
“I don’t know of any such per
son.”
"Would you have any objection to
being thrown out of an automobile
and rolling down a steep embank
ment?”
"Dear me, that would be dangerous,
wouldn’t it?”
“Well, what are your recommenda
tions, anyway?”
"I ran act.”
“Oh! You must think we sre
etill living in the dark ages.”—Chi
cago Record-Herald.
■A.W.Gleasox,
A T otary Public.
fall’s Catarrh Curds taken iateriially,and
acts directly ou the blood and mucous sur-
kccs of the system Send for testimonials,
bee. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O.
# old by all Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
The German Emperor has more
servants in his employ than any other
monarch. Altogether they number
over 3000, about two-thirds of them
being women.
licit cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’a
Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Drug-
gM*. Mail' orders promptly filed hv Dr.
E. DetchonMed.Uo.,CrawfordsYille > Ind. $1.
Of all men sailors suffer most from rheu
matism.
V
MISUNDERSTOOD.
DeRiter—Wouldn’t you like to read
this, new book of mine?
Kandor—No, thank you.
DoRiter—It's Clever ley's latest nov
el. I just bought it—
Kandor—Oh, let’s have it. I thought
you meant you wrote it.—Catholic
Standard and Times.
TORTURED WITH GRAVED.
gtiico Using Doan’ Kidney Fills Not
a Single Stone Has Formed.
Capt. S. L. Crute, Adjt. Wm. Watts
Camp, U. C. V., Roanoke, Va., says:
‘T suffered a long,
long time with my
hack, and felt
draggy and lis>
i less and tired all
? the time. 1 lest
> from my usual
.'|f_ weight, 225, to
170. Urinary pas
sages were too
frequent and I
have had to get
up often at night.
1 had headaches
rnd dizzy spells also, but my worst
suffering was from renal colic. After
I began using Doan's Kidney Pills 1
passed a gravel stone as big as a
bean. Since then I have never bad
an attack of gravel, and have picked
un to my former liea’tb and weight.
1 am a well man, and give Dean's
Kidney Pills credit for it.”
Sold by all dealers. 5 0 cents a
bor. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N. Y.
THE SIGNAL.
Tommy—Does your nia hit your
(foot under the table when you've had
enough?
Johnny—No; that's when I haven’t
had enough. When I have she sends
for the doctor.—Harper's Elizar.
POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD.
Guarantee On Their Product?.
We warrant and guarantee that a’!
packages of Postum Cerca!, Grape-
Kuts arid Elijah's Manna hereafter
sold by any jobber or retailer, eo"-
ply with the provisions of the Na
tional Pure Food Law, and are no*
and shall not be adulterated or r::r-
branded within the - meaning'of~said
Act of Congress approved June 2 0,
1906, and entitled, “An act for pre
venting the manufacture, sale or
transportation of adulterated or mis
branded or poisonous or deleterious
foods, drugs, medicines, liquors, and
for regulating traffic therein for
other purposes.”
Postum CmrAx Co., Ltd.
C. W. Post, Chairman,
Battle Creek. Mich.
Dec. 12, 1906.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 15th day of December, 1906.
Benjamin F. Reid,
Notary Public.
My commission expires July 1, 1907.
Our goods are pure, they always
have been and always will be, they
are not mis-branded. We have al
ways since the beginning of our busi
ness, printed a truthful statement on
, the package of the ingredients con
tained therein and we stand back of
every package.
A Humans Man.
Senator Jacob H. Gallinger Is
known in Congress as the chief of
the humanitarians and as the father
of many reforms. They say in Wash
ington that the New Hampshire
statesman is doubly barred from go
ing fishing. First, because he won’t
put a worm on a hook because it
hurts the worm; and second, he won’t
catch a fish on a hook because it
hurts the fish. Senator Gallinger has
an ear open to every plea of poverty,
to every cry of distress from whom
soever it comes. Among the meas
ures which the New Hampshire mat
has advocated in Congress for the
bettering of things on earth are
measures intended to secure proper
care for the insane, to prevent the
docking of horses’ tails, to prevent
cruelty to all animals, to provide for
delinquent and depen lent children, to
train woman nurses for the navy and
to condemn insanitary buildings. Mr.
Gallinger is a strong man with a soft
heart.—Chicago Post.
WHAT DID HE SAY?
"Young Jolliem always says the
right thing, doesn't he? He never
seems at loss for the proper reply.”
“Well, 1 saw him nonplussed once.”
“How was that?’’
“Miss Keene asked him if he
thought she looked as ol 1 as she was.”
—Cleveland Leader.
POOR FATHER.
Father—It is incredible what a lot
of money you need.
Son—I don’t need any, father. It’s
the other people who are always want
ing some from me!—Meggendorfer j
Blatter.
FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.. Phiia., Pa.
A new electric fixture consists of a
jeweled, hand-wrought, polished,
brass band carrying a centre light
with mother of pearl shades and three
drop lights, with shades of the same
material.
Women Need Less Repose Than Men
—Beerbohm Tree’s Rest for a
First Night.
“Women, I say without hesitation,
need less sleep than men, and I ^ay
that after observation of many hun
dreds of them.”
Dr. Josiah Oldfield, the well-known
specialist, cannot account for the fact,
but yesterday he told a Daily Mail
representative that, whether they are
of the worjeing classes or of higher
station in life, women need, and their
nature is satisfied with less sleep than
their husbands or other male rela-^
lives demand.
Meantime man differs as to what
he needs. The following are experi
ences or advice as to the duration
of sleep sent to the Daily Mail by dis
tinguished men:
The Bishop of RIponi: When
young, take as much sleep as you
need; when old, as much as you can
get.
Sir Frederick Treves: The aver
age amount of sleep for myself is
seven to eight hours.
■Sir George Lewis, the well-known
solicitor: I think eight hours suf
ficient. I sleep nine hours.
Mr. Vincent Hill, general manager
of the South-Eastern Railway: 1
think it is well that people should
sleep as long as they can, and that
is my practice.
Mr. Beerbohm Tree: I should say
in my case eight hours’ sleep is bet-
! ter than seven, and nine hours better
j than eight. 1 take nine hours when-
| ever I can, and invariably sleep for
j that period When on a holiday, and as
near to it as possible at all times.
Further, I consider sleep before any
effort, with the power to go to sleep
at any time, most valuable. • I have
cultivated that power, and invariably
recuperate by its aid before the ex
hausting strain of a "first night” or
before playing a new part.
Sir Edward Ward, Permanent Un
der-Secretary for War: I find six and
a half hours enough. I daresay I
could manage nine or ten hours with
an occasional wake up; but I should
call that "slacking.”
Dr. Jcsiah Oldfield: It is certain
that every man must have a certain
minimum of sleep per twenty-four
hours. Most find that minimum
eight hours, but an enormous number
are satisfied with five and a half hours,
I always sleep eight hours and re
gard that as, on the whole, the prop
er minimum for a man. Certainly
five and a half hours is not enough.
Sir Robert Ball: Don't expect an
astronomer to confess how many
hours of the precious night he wastes
by staying in bed.
The Earl of Aberdeen, Lord Lieuten
ant of Ireland: I find that much can
be accomplished in either direction
by training and habit. But as to the
saying that one cannot burn the can
dle at both ends I have heard the
suggestion that it is one of the ways
of making both ends meet.
During the six months which Mr.
Charles Frohman, the theatre man
ager, spent in London recently his
hours of sleep averaged not mote
than five. He rose at 7:30 a. m., and
rarely got to bed before 2 a. m., some
times later. ✓
At the Bank of England a high of
ficial said he liked twelve hours when
ever he could get it—that is, be
tween Saturday and Sunday. ‘‘Other
days I don't get enough.”
The principal of a leading firm of
stock brokers said: “Members of my
profession sleep well because we have
easy consciences. I myself find nine
to ten hours sufficient.”—London Mail.
The Circus.
"The circus must have taken $15,-
000 or $20,000 away from Charlotte,”
said a calculating business man.
"They more than earned it,” de
clared a man who understands. "If
1,000 children saw the circus and
the animals, I don't grudge the money
the show got.”
Where the return? Certainly the
mere two hours’ of pleasure under
the tent would not be worth so much
money to a few children. But it does
not end there. What immense treas
ures for a child’s imagination! How
vivid will be bis memories of some
of the sights, and how he will see
live forms in every-day objects. How
much longer his imagination may live,
and when that dies a great part of
the beauty and sweetness has gone
out of life!
Yes, let the circus come, if it takes
away twice $20,000.—Charlotte Ob
server.
Some American consuls abroad com
plain that they have to pay as much
as $C or $7 a month in fines on let
ters, etc., sent to them with insuffic
ient postage.
CRIED EASILY.
Nervous Woman Stopped Coffee and
Quit Other Things.
No better practical proof that cof
fee is a drug can be required than to
note how the nerves become unstrung
in women who habitually drink it.
The stomach, too, rebels at being
continually drugged with coffee and
tea—they both contain the drug—
caffeine. Ask your doctor.
An la. woman tells the old story
thus:
*‘I had used coffee for six years and
was troubled with headaches, ner
vousness and dizziness. In the morn
ing upon rising I used to belch up a
sour fluid regularly.
"Often I got so nervous and mis
erable I would cry without the least
reason, and I noticed my eyesight was
getting poor.
"After using Postum a while I ob
served the headaches left me and
soon the belching of sour fluid
stopped (water brash from dyspep
sia). I feel decidedly different now,
and 1 am convinced that it is because
I stopped coffee and began to use
Postum. I can see better now, my
eyes are stronger.
“A friend of mine did not like Pos
tum. but when I told her to make it
like it said on the package, she liked
it all right.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Always boil
Postum well and it will surprise you.
Read the little book, "The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs. "There’s a rea
son.”
A TOMATO ORCHARD.
You Can Have One In Florida With
Tomato Treea 15 Feet High.
If you could keep the frost away
from a tomato vine for a couple of
years It would get to be a fair sized
tree. At least the Texas Farmer
says so and claims that It actually
occurs sometimes in Florida in years
when the frost king leaves that State
alone.
By the same «ign you can plant
tomatoes In winter In Florida and
have them grow all the spring and
summer and fall, and under the right
conditions they become very large.
The midrib of the leaf of such a
tomato plant will grow to be eigh
teen Inches long, a veritable tree
limb.
As a result of having seven acres
of winter tomatoes frozen out during
the great freeze In Florida one grow
er learned something about how they
stake tomatoes In Mississippi. He
tried three-quarters of an acre of It
In Florida, and the rows of tomato
plants, hanging full of fruit, looked
like a dwarf fruit orchard.
It takes a lot of work, though, and
time to stake and prune tomatoes,
but for a kitchen garden supply.
North or South, especially if space is
limited, the method is ideal. Six
feet is the height to which the to
matoes should be trained, and pruned
to a single stem. They can be made
to grow ten or fifteen feet as well,
but this Is an inconvenient height.
Prayed For Thick Hair.
Methodist Episcopal Bishop Earl
Cranston, of Washington, D. C., says
he has solved the reason that the
old church fathers discouraged the
study of theology by the gentler sex.
Women, says Bishop Cranston, have
no bump of reverence and can
not differentiate the essentials of re
ligion. And to illustrate, he tells
of an earnest exhortation which he
delivered in a Maryland hamlet and
a subsequent conversation with his
hostess. This woman was a pillar
of the church, and known for her
philanthropy and self-sacrifice in aid
ing the cause of religion. She talk
ed about the efficacy of prayer, and
then reflected sadly, “Well, I pray
a great deal and for many things, but
I never get the things I want most.
I know you will say that they can
not be good for me, or my Heavenly
Father will send them. But now,
what harm would it do me to have
thick hair. I abhor the idea of a
switch or false front, and I am pray
ing all the time for my hair to get
thick, and do you know that the more
I pray, the more my hair drops out.
I actually had to stop praying, and
I noticed the difference right away.
Nursing Mothers and
Over-burdened Women
In all stations of life, whose vigor and
vitality may have been undermined and
broken - down by over - work, exacting
social duties, the too frequent bearing of
children, or other causes, will find in Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription the most
potent, Invigorating restorative strength-
giver ever devised for their special bene
fit. Nurslnganothers wlUfind it especial
ly valuable ih. sustaining Yhelr strength
and promotingTm dhundant Ikmrishment
for the child. ExpectantjmpHiers too
will find it a pricelessHa^iiJtrTpbepVe the
system for baby’s coming and rehtjNring
the ordeal comparatively painless/* It
ran rlo nr> harm iq jiny state, or condition
oLtheTemale system. ~ ’
Delicate, nervous, weak women, who
suffer from, frequent headaches, back
ache, dragging-down distress low down
in the abdomen, or from painful or irreg
ular monthly periods, gnawing or dis
tressed sensation in stomach, dizzy or
faint spells, see imaginary specks or spots
floating before eyes, have disagreeable,
pelvic catarrhal drain, prolapsus, ante-
version or retro-version or other displace
ments of womanly organs from weakness
of parts will, whether they experience
many or only a few of the above symp
toms, find relief and a permanent cure by
using faithfully and fairly persistently
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
This world-famed specific for woman’s
weaknesses and peculiar ailments is a
pure glyceric extract of tho choicest na
tive, medicinal roots without a drop of
alcohol in its make-up. All its ingredi
ents printed in plain English on its bottle-
wrapper and attested under oath. Dr.
Pierce thus invites tho fullest investiga
tion of his formula knowing that it will
be found to contain only the best agents
known to the most advanced medical
science of all the different schools of prac
tice for the cure of woman’s peculiar
weakuesses and ailments.
If you want to know more about the
composition and professional endorse
ment of the '’Favorite Prescription.” send
postal card request to Dr. R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y., for his free booklet treat
ing of same.
You can’t afford to accept as a substi
tute for this remedy of known composition
a secret nostrum of unknown composir
tion. Don’t do it.
Laziness is a sort of locomotor
ataxia that destroys the power of am
bition.
**•
,~ / t
& v/#- ■ y r
« • 9
•T J
• 99 9
|What JoyThey Bring
T® E very Home
as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—v/hen in health—and
how conducive to health the games In which they indulge, the outdoor life they
enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome
diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their*health should be preserved,
not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri
ous or objectionable nature, and if at any time a remedial agent is required, to assist
nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure
and wholesome and truly beneficial In effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy,
Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has
come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate
of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use.
Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because
they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa
ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an
original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and
presented in an agreeable syrup in which the v/holesome Californian blue figs are
used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence
we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent
medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication.
Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs
always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.— plainly
printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size
only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having
printed thereon the name of any ather company, do not accept it. If you fail to get
the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have
a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children,
whenever a laxative remedy is required.
e • o
ilCr THUS ftn’C Cherokee ^Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein Remedy for
SMi LUn W Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe ^ywre^Aii druggists Ub 85e, *6c r °an* , t]f.OO?
Light SAWMILLS; CAMGEr PLANTS FOR SALE!
LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES
SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND
GASOLINE ENGINES.
Try LOMBARD, AD S!;! Ti
I am now prepared to fill orders for mv Colabrated
CABBAGE PLANTS in any quantity desired.
EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD—Earliest and best
sure header, small type.
CHARLESTON WAKEFIELD—Ationt ten day* later
than Early Jersey’s, also a sure header ol 5nc size.
SUCCESSION—Best known sure heading rsrletr
| ol laixe flat cabbage, later than Charleston Wakefield.
These plants are from the very beat tested seeds *nd
| crown in the open air and will stand severe cold with.
I. out injury. All orders are filled from the same beds
; that 1 am using for ray extensive cabbage farms. Bat-
I Ufaction guaranteed.
HICKS'
CAPUDINE
immediately cures
HEADACHES
|Brcaks up COEDtS
IN a TO 12 HOURS
m Trial Bools 10c. Al OnuUlia
Frices f. o. b. here, packed in light boxes: *
BOO for SI.OO. 1,000 to 5,OOG at 81.50 per M. 5,000 to lO.OOQ at 81.25 per M.
Special prices on 1 ar.xer quantities. Ail orders shipped C. O. D. when not accompanied by remittance.
CHAS. IVI. CIBSON, Young’s Island, S. C.
Police of New York city arrest 122
persons each day for intoxication.
JONES’
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Eromo Quinine Tablets.
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure.
E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. ioz.
Japanese Taste in Colors.
The Japanese dress very quietly,
even more so than Americans. The
babies are decked out in very gay
colors, contrasts of purple, yellow,
red, etc. The children wear mostly
big patterns of “kasuri.” This is the
name for the large patterns of
squares, blocks, lines, etc., which are
mostly white patterns on blue ground.
Blue is a favorite color in Japan,
probably more so than any other sing
le color, varying from indigo to very
dark blue. The older they get the
more soberly they dress, and the men
wear no loud colors. Black may be
said to be the national color in cloth,
and the clothing mostly used is very
narrow striped gray and black. The
younger girls affect gay colors, and
on holidays that is true of a large por
tion of the people, but ordinarily the
“daimio jima” is the national cos
tume. The name "daimio jima,”
which means "daimio stripes,” is said
to have been derived from the fact
that anciently it was the distinctive
dress of the daimios. Next to the
stripes, small white dots on a blue
ground are in most common use.—
Daily Trade and Consular Reports.
LIFE AND SAYINGS
BY HIS WIFE
AGENTS WANTED Agents are coining money. Send 60c for Canvassing
Big Book, 7x10, Price 82 CO
Circulars Free.
id Contract for territory.
J. B, NICHOLS & GO.,
ATLANTA
GA.
CABBAGE Plants! CELERY Plants!,
and all kind* of garden plant*.Can now furnish all kinds of eobbngel
plant*, grown In the open air and will *tand great cold, urown froml
»et-ds of th? most reltuble •aedamen. We u*e the *aiuo plant* on our|
thousand acre truck farm. Plant* carafnUy counted and pryporly pack
ed Celi rv r«adv Inst of Dec. Lettnee, Oaion and Beet plan:*, (atnal
time or earlier. Reduced expre** rate* prt>ml*ed,«-blch.when effective,!
will give us (SO per cent. le»- than anerchan.'llM rate*. Prices: >mall lot* I
il.W per thousand, large lot »UX> to *1^5 per thoo**n 1. T, O. B. Meg-1
g'-tts. 8. C. Arlington WMteSplnoCncumberSeedWCeuUperpo'una.l
*. O. H.. Meegett*. S. U. The United State* Agricultural Department I
has established an Experimental Station on ourtanue.to test all kind* I
etf vegetable* expaelally cabbages. The result* of these experiment* we will be pb a*ed to
give you at any tlme.-Yours respectfully ,-N. II. IlI.ITt II COMPAMT, MKGOETTS,
Avery & Company
SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN,
Rt-53 Soutii Forsyth St., Atlanta. Oa.
—ALL KINDS OF—
MACHINERY
CURED
Gives
Quick
Relief.
Removes all swelling in 8 to 20
days ; effects a permanent curd
in 30 to 6o days. Trial treatment
.given free. Kothingcan be fairer
S Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Song. ■
^Specialists. Cox b Atlanta, Gp
Dropsy
Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
Many a man never reaches success
because he tries to carry too much
along with him on the journey.
LUMBAGO
AND
SCIATICA
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all i
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
No LLnit l
Keep Your Blood Par®.
No one can be happy, light-hearted and
healthy with a body till of blood that
cannot do its duty to every part because
of its impurity; therefore, the first and
most important work in hand is to purify
the blood eo that every organ "will get the
full benefit of a healthy circulation. There
is no remedy we know of so good as 'that
old family remedy, Brandreth’s Pplg. Each
pill contains one grain of the solid extract
of sarsaparilla blended with two grains
of a combination of pure and mild vegeta
ble products, making £ a blood purifier
unexcelled in character. One or two taken
every night for awhile will produce sur
prising results.
Brand ret h’s Pills hare been in use for
over a century and are sold in every drug
and medicine store, plain or sugar-coated!
THE DEAR GIRLS.
Fred—Nothing pleases a girl more
than the devoted attentions of the
man she loves.
Tess—Oh, yes; there Is something
that pleases her more.
Fred—What is It?
Tess—The devoted attentions of
the man some other girl loves.—
Woman’s Home Companion.
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH
Large Engines and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Doga,
Steam Governors. Full line Engines &
Mill Supplies. Send for frre Cataloguo.
TBADS
MASK.
3
, ST.
1 JACOBS
OIL
Penetrates to the Spot
Right on the dot.
Price 25c and 50e
iOSCCC&OSfi
You too wouM have to build
’Digger barns If you would
only listen to reason and "in-
creaso your yields per acre”
oy cnrlchlEgyour Boll a.fd feeding (F]
your plants with that WOndei-worLer,|
Virginia°Carolina Fertilizer
It has been the tromcmJous sue.'.M
of many farmers all over the bC-tta,
who started life wiih only a ft w acres
ur.d a ono-horso plow. Now, after using
these fertilizers for many years, these
I farmers are neb. Read what they say in
our&imanao. Atk } our dcalerforit,or
send oc. In stamps to pay cost of wrap
ping and postage cn a copy. Be sure
and ask for Virginia-( arolma i'ertlli-
| zera, and accept no substitute. n
! Virglaik-Carollna Chemical Co.,
Richmond. Va.
Norfolk, Va.
Durham, N. C.
Chaiiceton, S. C.
Baltimore, ltd.
Increase ^bur
Yields Per Acre
Atlanta, Ga.
Savannah. Ga.
Montgomery, Ala.
Memphis, Tenn.
fchreveport, La.
Hogless Lard
&
None anywhere near so ^
good, so pure, so eco- j|j
nonnical, so satisfactory.
U.«L Government Inspected.
DYSPEPTIC.
"He used to complain because ha
never got what he wanted .to eat.”
"Yes, but he's very rich now.”
“Yes, and now he complains be
cause he never wants what he gets
to eat.”—Philadelphia Ledger.
PECAN
NURSERIES
d. A BEAR PROP.
PALATKA.. FLA.
ztHO toft p/ftcclist
(At1-’07)
A FACE
full of pimples
aipoil* hf. for many a one. Get rid of
them by aiding digestion with
Parsons* Pills
They assist digestion, help the lirar to do
it* work, and cure constipation.
Put up in glass vial*.
Trie* 21 cents. For sale by all dealora.
I. S JOWriO* A C9. Bests*. Mm.
pooauo* of thoa* Uffiy, crUily. gray hslrs- U«9 ** LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER. RHcs, Si.OO, r*t«IL