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MAYOR OF SUNBURY Says Pe-rta-na Is a Good Medicine. .<• Hon. C. C. Brooks, Mayor of Sunbury, Ohio, also Attorney for Farthera’ Bank and Sunbury Building and Loan Co., writes! ^ ’‘I have the utmost confidence in the virtue of Peruna. It la a great medicine. I have uaed it and !• have known many of my frienda who have obtained bene ficial results from its uae. I cannot pvdtse Peruna too highly. CHILD LABOR LAW STARVATION IN CHINA. idge Of State of Georgia Declared a “Dead Letter.” OPINION OF BEVERIDGE rpHERE are a host of petty ailmenta jL which are the direct result of the weather. t- This ia more true of the excesaive heat of summer and the intense cold of win ter, but is partly true of all seasona of the year. . Whether it be a cold or a cough, catarrh of the head or bowel complaint, whether the liver be affected or the kidneys, the cause is very liable to be the aaiue. The weather slightly deranges the mu cous membranes of the organs and the re sult is some functional disease. Peruna has become a standby In thousands of homes for minor ail ments of this sort. Ash Your Drugr/lst for Free Peruna Almanac For 1007. It irenerally takes a soft man to spread himself. FITS,St. Vitns'Dance:Nervous Diseases per- manentlycured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. t2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila.. Po. But few people appreciate the rose until they encounter the thorn. To Cure a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Ouinine Tablet. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature Is on each box. £5a Yearnings to be Clean. Oh. for a Chinese laundryman! Can’t somebody send Milton a "Sing Lee,” a “Wau Chung Tang,” or some such Celestial creature who wants to make a barrel of money doing our laundry work? One of the most cry ing needs In Milton now Is some one to handle “Washee" In an up-to-dato way. If some enterprising citizen would put in a laundry here, or If Borne Chinaman would go into the business. >we would keep in our towm much money that now goes out. ahd the service would be more satisfac tory.—Milton (Fla.) Star. RHEUMATISM ‘■How n fiS$M Mr. NEURALSU ST JACOBS OIL The Proved Remedy For Over 50 Years. Price 25c and 50c Light SAW MILLS LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, AV %1’ TA - Increase \bttr. Melds Per Acre In Senate Speech, Indianian Makes As sertion, and is Promptly Chal lenged oy flacon, Carmack and Tillman. “The child laoor law of Georgia is a dead le.tcr. There is no system of mill inspee’.Oii provided, and no means of enforcing it,” said Senator toeveridfeo, in i.is discussion of child lapor in the senate Monday. When he began to pay attention to conditions in Georgia and other southern states, the southern senators began to be heard from. Among them were Sena tors Bacon ot Georgia, Carmack ot Tennessee and lillman of South Car olina. Senator Bacon asked that the child labor act, passed by the Georgia leg islature, be admitted iu the published report of Senator Beveridge’s speech, in connection with his remarks dealing with Georgia. This the senator frem Indiana declined to allow done, and the senator from Georgia gave notice that, at the conclusion of Senator Bev- trdige’s remarks, he would ask the at tention of the senate long enough to call attention to the Georgia child lar bor act approved August 1, llrGb, in order that it might go in the record immediately following the Beveridge address. Senator Beveridge declared that since this law went into effect, on January 1, forbidding children be tween 10 and 12 years of age being employed in mills, unless they were orphans or children of indigent pa rents, more than 3,000 applications for permission to work children in the mills of Fulton county had been re ceived by Ordinary John R. Wilkin son of that county. many have been granted?” Bacon. “All of them.” Mr. Bacon then explained that the law prohibited children under twelve years of age from w-orking after Jan uary 1, 1907. “Yes,” responded Mr. Beveridge, “but there is not an inspector in the state, and no means of enforcing that provision. What good is a meas ure of that kind?” Senator Bacon had made the point that the specific instances cited by Senator Beveridge were isolated cases, and not indicative of conditions gen erally prevailing. In reply the advo cate of a national child labor law bill said that the filing of applications af fecting 3,000 children In one county, was not evidence sustaining the scarcity claims of such cases. Senator Bacon made clear the point that he was heartily in favor of rea sonable regulation cf child labor, and said that his objection to the Bever idge national child labor law was based upon the ground that it com dieted with state authority. So far as the evils of child labor were concerned, Senator Bacon ad mitted that there was probably a great deal of force in the arguments pre sented, but that Georgia was in the way to correct it, and that condi tions would improve since the pass age of the state child labor law. He thought state legislative action the only way to deal with the question. Mr. Beveridge stat3l that three- fourths of the cotton factories of the south were opposing the bill; that the railioads of the south were opposing it, and that the coal mine operators of the south were opposing it. He presented an illustrative map showing tne location of the opposing indus tries, and said that in anticipation of his weighty opposition he should de- iOte the major portion of his speech :o setting forth evidence of the de plorable conditions he had pictured. This evidence, he said, was all sworn to and in the form of affidavits. Horirble State of Affairs in the Co- I lestial Kingdom Revealed In Re ports to State Department. Mail reports from American consu lar officers In Cnina, which reached the state department Monday, regard ing the famine and resulting condi tions, still iurther Confirm the stoiles of suffering and hardship among me poor in the districts affected. In tact, Ctnsul llavnes, at Nanking, says mat the famine is ten times worse than anything known in that part of the empiic for foity years. The government Is trying to help the starving people to keep their cat- tie, and to this end Is taking their oxen and buffaloes in pawn for two taels each. Consul General Rodgers, at Shang hai snys an inquiry which he has made through entirely private sources gives the general conclusion that the famiue by March 1, will be .egarded as severe, and perhaps more so than that of 1873, by which it is thougnt 10,000,000 lives were lost. The report of Mr. Roogcrs is ac companied by a statement by Dr. Henry M. \V!:ods of the Southern Presbyterian Mission at Hwai-An-Fu, who estimates that 10,000,000 people are affected by the .amine, i,000,000 of wnom are starving. He says the:e are at present more than 500,000 ref ugees at Tsing Kiang-Pu, huddled in mat sheds, and that the pitiful sight is daily witnessed of parents offer ing their children for sale at from $2 to $4 each. Brigandage and rob bery, he adds, are everywhere rife. Money Wanted for Sufferers. Consul General Rodgers Tabled the state department under Monday’s date relative ot the Chinese famine as fol lows: “Strongly advise that money contributions be sent instead of food at present. Provision can be purchas ed at Shanghai at favorable prices. Time saved is a great object.” TIRADE AGAINST THE SOUTH. Made at Meeting of Congregational Club in Boston- The Congregational Club, at its an nual meeting in Boston Monday night, listened to a discussion of the “Church and National Perils,” by Professor Bushnell Han. of Harvatx] University; Professor; Kelly Miller of Howard University. Washington, D. C., and Rev. W. J. Cooper ot New York, secretary of thse American Mis sionary Associahtion. All the speakers dealt with (he negro question in the south and the recent speech of Sen ator Tillman was referred to fre quently. Professor Miller, shaking on the topic “Race Conditions in the South,” said in part: “The adjustment of the advanced and backward races of mankind is the greatest problem of the twentieth century. They tell us that the negro is u menace to white niunhs civiliza tion. In this new propagar.jda of race enmity and hate, Benjamin Tillman is the chief priest, with a trinity of Thomases as his literary evangelists, Thomas Nelson Page, Thomas Wat son and Thomas Dixon, Jr. Professor Miller denied that the members of the ntgio race had band ed together to protect one another in the commission of crime against the white race, but, on the other hand, he claimed that negroes by- thousands have been lynched and murdered by banded assassins, who have stood together oathbound to pro tect one another in crime, and against a helpless race. CONVICTS WORK ON LEVEE. Governor Vardaman Harris Squad to Point of Danger. Governor Vardanian was requested Monday to send a squad of convicts below Greenville, Miss., where there is a threatened break in the levee. Ho directed Superintendent Heeland to hurry fivty convicts to the scene at once and take m many more au might be necessary. One Of Tbe Results of liberally using our fertili zers. is to pay off a mortgage on the old farm Read the fol lowing from Messrs. Wherry a Bon,owners of the Magnolia Fruit Farm, Durant. Miss.: "We made $900 from one acre strawberries, on which your fertilizers were used. Eight years ago we bought this placo at $20 per acre. It was then considered to have been worn out twenty years before, but by liberally using jinia-Carolina Fertilizer* under peas and velvet beans, we can now grow almost any thing, and have been offered $360 per acre for the place. Wo experimented with a great many brands of fcrtUfrers, butnnd the highest per-cent, cheaper.” Now don’t you think Virglnia-Carollna Jortilisers would enable you to pay off a mortgage if you had one? Well, don't use any other. « Virglnia-Carollna Chemical Ca Richmond. Va. Norfolk. Va. Durham. N. C. Charleston, S. C. Baltimore. Md. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Memphis. Tenn. Shreveport, La. MORGAN TO ASSIST OBEAR. Captain Wheeler Will Not Be Assign ed to Georgia Militia as Reported. Notice has been given by the war (.epaitment ut Washington that Cap tain J. N. Morgan ot the tw-elfth cav alry, United States army, stationed at Fort Oglethorpe, lu-.s been assigned to assist inspector General \V. G. Obear in the inspection of the Georgia .tate national guard. Ordefs were promulgated some days ago saying that Capt. Jos. Wheeler, U. S. A., would be assigned. No reason is giver, lor the change. DOCTORS MISTAKES Are said often to be buried six feet under ground. But many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kid ney disease, another from nervous pros tration, another with pain here and there, and in this way they present alike to themselves and their easy-going or over busy doctor, separa*'- diseases, for which he, assuming them to oe such, prescribes his pills and potions. In reality, they arc all only symptoms caused by some uterine disease. The'pivyHcian,'ignorant of the cause of suffermg.kgeps upmAjreatment until large bills are made. ?The>uffering patient gets no bette\2J*^ , c‘»w>*L4lStbe wrong treatment, but probably wors?7 proper medicine like pr. Pierce’s Fy.-q’ Frescri hv-scription. directed to the < ausc woufa have entirely removed the disease^ there^ by dispelling all those distTessing symp toms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery. It has been well said, that "a disease known is half cured.” Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a scientific medicine, carefully devised by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman’s delicate system. It is made of native American medicinal roots and is perfectly harmless in its effects in cniu contmum <ir ~tnc~ f <:miiTe L system. As a powerful invigorating tonic "Fa vorite Prescription” imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs dis tinctly feminine in particular. For over worked. "worn-out,” run-down.” debili tated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-girls,” house-keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women gen erally, Df. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being un equaled as an appetizing cordial and re storative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nerv ine "Favorite Prescription’’is uneoualcd and is invaluable in allaying and sub duing nervous excitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, St. Vitus’s dance, and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the uterus. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. One to three a dose. Easy to take as candy. REST CURE. Bill—Any piece of machinery Is helped by resting. Jill—Yes; I’ve always noticed that pay watch goes better after I’ve got t out of hock.—Yonkers Statesman. A new broom and a straight flush make a clean sweep. Piles Cured in G to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to ltdays or money refunded. 50c. A man isn’t necessarily absent- minded because he misplaces his con fidence. PHILIPPINE “DOBIE ITCH.” Itching Pimples Covered Body—Dis charged For Disability—Found Cure in Cuticura Reihedics. “I enlisted in the Corps of Engineers as a telegraph operator, and, while stationed in the Philippines, I became subject to the ’Dobie Itch,’ as the natives call it. In this disease small, white, itching pimples form under the skin, generally between the toes, on the limbs, between the lingers and under the arms. I never knew of a case originating outside tha Philippine Islands, but have known of many cases where it has returned in this country and invariaVy at the same time of the year j as the original attack. The cause, so far ! as I could learn, was some tropical parasite or germ peculiar to that region. “i got so bad that I was' confined to my quarters a week at a time. The Army Surgeons applied some carbolic solution, and :t would disappear for a time, when it would break cut again. I was discharged from the Engineers by reason of disability contracted in line or duty, and when I had the trouble again, my druggist, Mr. Z , of Brooklyn, recommended Cuticura Remedies. The immediate relief was mani fest with my first purchase, and the malady quickly yielded to the Cuticura Remedies. It kas nevei recurred or both ered me since I began to use and continued to use the Cuticura Remedies. You may quote ms as a believer in Cuticura Rem edies from personal experience. John S. Woods, 221 Fands St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 21 and 26, 19C6.” NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN a more potent remedy in the roots and herbs of the field than was evel produced from drugs. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers few drugs were used in medicines and Lydia E. Pinkham. of Lynn. Mass., in her study of roots and herbs and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. LYDIA E. PINKHA Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its record of more than thirty years, its long? list of actual cures of those serious ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache, flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable compound and what it has done for them. . Mrs Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pink ham and as her assistant for years before her decease advised under her immediate direction. Address. Lynn, Mass. The balloon has one g-reat meri^ over the automobile. It never runs over Innocent neJestrians. H. H. Gueex’s Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. Seo their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. The woman who stoops to marry seldom has time to straighten up again. abbage Plants! I now nrei>nT>*<l to flh or<lpm for m» 0«lel>rat«<l CABBAGE PLANTS in any quantity desireii. KART.Y JERSEY WAKEFIELD—Earliest and best rare header, email type. CHARLESTON WAKEFIELD—About ten days later than Early Jersey’s, also a sure hea ler of fine size. SUCCESSION—Best known sur* heading farijt* of ir*e flat cabbage, later than Charleston Wakefield. These plants are from the very best tested seeds and grown in the open air and will stand severe cold with out injury. All orders are filled from the sam* beds that I am using for my extensive cabbage farms. Sat isfaction guaranteed. large Prices f. o. b. hero, packed in light botes: BOO for SI.09. 1.09F t*> S.OJ » at Sl.53 par !*. 5,09.11» 10,000 at St.95 par At. Special prices on iarjnr q uititiM. VI nr 1 shionnl C. O D. whnn nnt aoevnpaaie 1 by remittance. CHAS. M. G1330N, Young’s Island, S. C. II© F* VHVI ftn*© Cherokee •Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein Remedy for U^jr i H 3 LOH W Coughs, Colds, LaGrippe for W^yearg^All ^rugi ab * - g y_tO«o4 Druggists. S5C, COo and fl.OOt WRITE US FREELY and frankly, In strictest confidence, telling all your troubles, and stating your age. We will send you FREE ADVICE, in plain sealed envelope, and a val uable 64-page Book on “Home Treatment for Women.” Address: Ladies’ Advisory Department, The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. G 98 A Little Child carries with It the possibilities of great happiness, into the heart of a childless home. Women who wish for children, should understand that sterility is not so much of a disease, as a symptom of female weakness, and, that in 90 cases out of 100, when the female weak ness has been cured by Woman’s Relief the longed-for visit of the stork comes. Dr. J. J. Livingston, of Freeman, Ind., writes; “I prescribed Cardui to a lady patient, who had previously had three or four mishaps. She took 6 bottles and was soon made the happy mother of a well-grown boy, who is still living and doing well. I think that Wine of Cardui is the sole cause of her being able to have this child.” Whatever may bo the form of your female trouble or weakness, try Cardui. It is a reliable remedy for all the diseases peculiar to women. AT ALL DRUGGISTS IN $1.00 BOTTLES TREATMENT OF TRAMPS. Bacon—The police are very consid erate of a poor homeless tramp in New York. Egbert—How so? Bacon—Why, when one goes to | sleep on a park bench the cop rap him up.—Yonkers Statesman. Some people’s goodness is probably due to the fact that they are never found out. < I AWFUL ATTACKS OF FAIN. WORI.D’S WOM>KK COTTON A new gpenies; first sold la-t spring ; was planted by 100 different farmers; has pro duced from 2 to 5 bales per acre; highly pro lific ; big boll, small seed, good staple ; E. Humphreys. Godwin &Oo.. Memphis,Tenn. A OLD VET WAS BEST SHOT. Aged Ex-Confederate and Young Man Fight Fatal Duel. Richard Parker, an aged ex-Confed- erate soldier, shot and killed Arch Mixon, a young farmer, alter a des perate shotgun duel in front of Par kers home, in Elba, Ala. The men quarreled over business matters, and rat ker was put on notice to expect c i armed conflict. NEGRO SQUEEZED OUT. Parted With Property for Less Than at First Offered. George W. Vanderbilt has just pur chased for two iliousr.nd dollars six acres of land and a log cabin from Charles C. Collins, colored. When Biltmore was first established the ne- Si'o declined to sell to .Mr. Vanderbilt for what the latter considered a rea sonable figure, though it is said Mr. Vanderbilt offered him $3,500, and the negro contended for $10,000. The property was practically surrounded by the Biltmore estate, of which it now becomes a part. Most Dreadful Case of Kidney Trouble and How It Was Cured. Thomas N. McCullough, 321 South TVeber St., Colorado Springs, Colo., says; “For twelve or fifteen years I was suffering fre quent attacks of pain in the back and kidneys that lasted for three weeks at a time. I would be unable to turn in bed. The urine was in a terrible condition, at times a com plete stoppage occurring. I began with Doan’s Kidney Pills, and soou felt better. Keeping on, l found com plete freedom from kidney trouble. The cure has been permanent. I owe my good health to Doan s Kidney Pills.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. The only time you can afford to get angry is when you haven’t anything else to do. HLS OPINION. She (after a quarrel).—I wouldn’t cry for the best man living, so there! ' He—You don’t have to cry for him, dear; you’ve got him. Invigorate the Digestion. To invigorate the digestion and stimu late the torpid liver and bowels there’s nothing so good as that old 'Vimily remedy, Brandreth’s Pills, which has been in use for over a century. They cleanse the blood and impart new vigor to the body. One or two every night for a week will usually be all that is required. For Constipation or Dyspepsia, one or two taken every night will in a short time afford great re lief. Brandreth’s Pills are the same fine lax ative tonic pill your "randparents used and being purely vegetable are adapted to every system. Sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar-coated. Mrs. Winslow’sSoothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Every time a girl is crossed in love she imagines that her heart is broken, but it only gets a very small dent. HICKS* CAPUDINE | IMMEDIATELY CUR.L3 HEADACHES |BreaK*up COLDvS IN O TO 13 MOOICS [trial Book IOl At Dnutfa CURED Gives Quick Relief. Removes all swelling in Store days ; effects a permanent cure in 30 to 6o days. Trial treatment given free. Nothingcan be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons, SDeclallsts. Box b Atlanta, fir Avery & Company SUCCESSORS TO AVERY & McMILLAN, ni-BS South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. —ALL KINDS OF— t MACHINERY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all Sizes. Wheat Separators. Even failure may sometimes be spoiled by success. C ALABAMA ANTI-PASS BILL Wins Out in State Senate and Con forms to Federal Statute. The Alabama senate Monday pass ed the administration anti pass meas ure, which substantially conforms to the federal anti-pass provision. An effort was made to exclude newspa pers exchanging advertising space for transportation, but this met with prompt defea:. LOTTERY MEN ARRESTED. ~.aid Made on Mobile Print Shop by United States Officials. Secret service men from Washing ton, D. C., aided by local customs officials, made a raid ca the printing office of th3 Honduras Lottery compa ny in Mobile, Ala., Wednesday, and confiscated everything in the establish ment and caused the arrest of E. L. Pinac and Lewis Graham of New Or leans, and eighteen employees. Includ ing pressmen, printers and packers. REPORT FILED WITH GARFIELD. Latest Move in Warfare Against the New York Cotton Exchange. Representatives Livingston of Geor gia and Burleson of Texas Monday afternoon filed with Janies R. Gar field of the bureau of corporations de partment of commerce and labor, a copy of the report of the committee on agriculture and forestry made to the- fifty-third congress. In ihi s su b- ject of cotton futures and gambling therein is given exhaustive attention. Estimates of the country’s copper i production this year place the output at between 940,000,000 and 970,- 000,000 pounds. Last year’s produc tion was 901,000,000 pounds. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put to- 1 gether, and until the last few years was sup posed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by con stantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure, manufactured bv F. J-. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only con stitutional cure on the market. It is taken in- ternallv in doses from lOdrons toateaspoon- fu!. It’acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hun dred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circularsand testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. The sea-level canal from Mar seilles to the Rh’ne River is to bo completed in seven years at a cost of $13,730,000. Itch cured in 30 minutes bv Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion : never fails. Sold by Drug gists. Mail orders promptly filled bv Dr. E. Detchon Med. t 'o.. ( 'rawfordsville,Ind. $1. Of all men sailors suffer most from rheu« nritism. arolina Cement Co. ATLANTA, CH ^ RLKSTOX, BIRMINGHAM, NKW ORLEANS. LIME, CEMENT, ETC. Land Plaster Supplants Fertilizer. See Catalog. •iCME" FLINT COATED ASPHALT ROOFING, 1. 2 and 3 ply, for Barn*. Residence#*. Warehouses. Better. Cheaper than Shinnies and other Roofing. Sample:-*, prices, address DEPT. C. BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, Circular Saws,Saw Teeth.Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Engines A Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. cTWozley’s Lemon Elixir. Is a sure cure for all Liver Troubles and a preventive of Typhoid and other fevers. ( Grandparent Good for Parent t Baby Ask Your Neighbor 50c. and $1.00 per bottle at Drug Stores. You Feel Well when your stomach takes proper care of the food you eat. Parsons’ Pills aid digestion, gently expel all refuse matter from the system—make new rich blood and insure health. Put up in glass vials. Price 25 Cents. At all dealers. I. S. JOHNSON & CO.. Bcston. Mats. Hogless Lard None anywhere near s good, so pure, so ecc a * nomical, so satisfactor U. S. Government Inspects (At5-’07) CABBAGE Plants, CELERY Plants and all klndsof garden plant*. Can now furnlah all kinds of catbate plants, go vrn in the open air and will stand great cold Crown fr..m fceeds oi the most reliable seedsmen. We usj the plaotson nur thousand arre truck farm. Plent. carefully counted and properly park < d. Celery ready last < f Lee. Lettuce, ci fun and Ih-ei plants, same tore or f ar:j« r Reduced express rat** promtaeo.uhii b.wbrti effective will give us to per cent less than merghsr dbe rates. Rrtces: Small i« ts F1.£U per theuaand large lot Jl.Wi to $1.25 per thr usam). F O B. Mrg- petts.S. c. A rilngtr n « hite spine Cucumber reed 60 cents ter pound, r. <j. 1." ergttu, S. C. The United states Agrii uitural Lerartinent has established an| Exi-nrituenial station ou cur farme. to test all kinds of vegetables, eape cialiy Cabbages, the terults ot these experiment* we will !.e pk-a-ed to give vou at an i ours test ertfully HLITCH COMPAN Y. MEOOET a«oau»* of those ugly, grizzly, gray holro. Uoo ” LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER. *»nco. *».oorre;oliT