The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, October 17, 1907, Image 9

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|pr:. |f- ' ? .rr:; : WHAT IS PE-RU-NA? Is it a Catarrh Remedy, or a Tonic, or is it Both? 8ome people call Penroa a great tonic. Others refer to. Pertma as a great catarrh remedy. Which of these people are right? 2s it more proper to call Parana a catarrh remedy than to call it a tonic? Oar reply is, that Perona is both a trvnfo and a catarrh remedv. Indeed. there can be no effectual catarrh remf-L' ?dy that is not also a tonic. In order to thoroughly relievo any case of catarrh, & remedy must not -. -only have a specific action on the muT*TT fTia /VI * wua iliCilllllftllWI MJ W1V v? p: tarrh, but it must have a general tonic action on the nervous system. Catarrh, even in persons who are r otherwise strong, is a weakened con* dition of some mucous membrane. There must be something to strengthen the circulation, to give tone to the arteries, and to raise the vital forces, j Perhaps no vegetable remedy in the world has attracted so much attention from medical writers as HYDRASTIS i^WATVE'-ErCTS T)?* vn/n?jii<y?w^y? AUU nviMtvixui viu' cacy of this herb has been recognised many years, and is growing in its hold izpon the medical profession. When joined with CUBEBS and COPAIBA a j trio of medical agents is formed in Pexnna which constitutes a specific rem* ? edy for catarrh that in the present state of medical progress cannot be improved upon. This action, reinforced by such renowned tonics as C0I223SQHIA CANADENSIS, COEYDAU3 POEXOSA and CEDEOH SEED, ought to make this compound an ideal remedy for catarrh in all its stages and locations in the body. ** - - A* ? A L 31 _ _ 1 -4? jfTom a uaeoreocai standpoint; therefore, Psnuia, it beyond entidsm. The useof Pertma, confirms this opinion. Bumberless testimonials from every quarter of the earth furnisli ample evidence that ibis judgment it sot o*sr enthusiastic. When practical experience confirms a well-grounded theory tbe result is ?troth that caimot be A brave man starts a new battle instead of howling about the wounds of the one he lost TEN YEARS OF PA IX. ;/.v/ ? ??? Usable to Do Even Housework Because of Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clinr ton St, Napoleon, O., says: "For fifteen years I was a great sufferer - from kidney trouj&f bles. My back pained me terribly. Every VSturnor movecaused i sharp,7 shooting Palns- My eyesight wss Poor, dark spots sPP8ared before me. nfiflVwr and 1 had dlzzy ** spells. For ten years I eould. not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. , The kidney secretions were Irregular, and doctors were not helping me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief, and finally cured me. ? - They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milbnrn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. During 1906 immigrants to the number of 1,221 arrived in Chile against 293 for 1905 and 4,000 for the first four months of 1907. BABY WASTED fo SKELETON. In Torments With Terrible Sores on Faee and Body?Tore at Flesh ?Cured by Cuticura. "Jly little son, when about a year and m half old, began to have sores come out on his face. They began to come on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Still he grew worse. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering ' ' <3 T 4A ktn kavt/?a It) DC JiiiCW fiV lAOU X UOU w u?0 u?uuo uji . cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton and was hardly able to walk. I sent to the drug store and got a<*ke of Coticura Soap and a bos of Cuticnra Ointment, and at the end of abont two months the sores were all well. He bas never bad any sores of any kind since, and T can sincerely say that only for the Onticura Remedies my precious child wonM have died from those terrible sores. I -used only one cake of Soap and about three boxes of Ointment. Mrs. Egbert Sheldon. R. F. D., No.l, Woodrille, Conn ' April 22, 1905." A man isn't necessarily bald because he has no heir. COURTING BLINDNESS Is what you are doing when you neglect twitching, watery, bloodshot, sore eyes. T-isnorrfi'i tp.wa l,otion cures nearly every eye disease. Cools,heals and strengthess. Get "Lecnardi's." It makes strong eyes. Guaranteed or money refunded. Druggists eeil it at 25 cts. or forwarded prepaid on reoeipt of priea by S. B. Leonardi Jk Co., Tampa, Fla. fen the QtHKle-minded compositor ha? ways. ': ; J?* ' WHY NOT? "Come," cried the mother of the peevish little bull-pup, "yon can't mend matters by whining, can you?" 'Tm afraid not," sniffed the pup. "Then," said the mother, "if not, whine not"?Answers. The recret of the glow worm and firefly is yet unsolved by science. Their light is entirely unaccompanied .fry heat. i \-f.y ' r . -v'V- ... - ....-v. - * - , x:- ; " ~ -wmm ' ;M' ' * ' '.'' * ' \' % r A pfOlffl BYTtt&'RLV-jK SONDAV IWfi'lRA W- H&NDErA|3 SERMON IlLi LIU L^l TH p. pAMPUS DlfMl. Subject: Children. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Churchy Hamburg avenue and Weirfield street, on the above theme, the pastor," Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, took as his text Matt. 18:3, "Little children.3 He said: The Bible is a book for the child. I had almost said It i3 a children's book. It is written in the language of the child for the most part and its themes are so treated as almost entirely to be intelligible to youth. Its precepts are for them. Its admopitions to adults are importantly in the interest of childhood. Its counsels are largely to the young. Its history is fascinating when properly delivered to the young. Its stories are ieruie for inspiration to the mind and soul of the child. Its invitation is to the child in yeard and to the childlike in heart alike. The greatest single character with whom the Bible has to deal was and is superlatively interested in the child.' For whatever else Jesus was, He was supremely Jteen in His appreciation of children, consummately philosophical in His attitude toward them, pre-eminently conscious of their ultimate value. He loved them better than their parents did. He loves our children more than we can ever iove them. For He saw in the cfiild whom He took in His arms more than its mother had capacity to discern. Jie sees 111 our cunuruu mure tuun we, suieuuuu siuueuis anci a. lasutuu v*. children as we are, dream. Jesus saw the soul value of the child, the eternal relationship of the being of the child to the eternal^kiugdom of Almighty God, far more clearly than any man before His time and far more plainly than we have, with all our wisdom and attainments in an age of surpassing scholarship and investigation, taken the trouble to see. And it is not strange that Jesus should have placed a high estimate upon the child. It is not at all wonderful that He should have given special attention to children. For the child is the most important and most promising as the most numerous element in the human race. Hfe is inescapable. He is the hope of the race. He is the field of our largest expectations. He is the largest reason for the endeavor and activity of the world. No man can overestimate, no man should underestimate, the child, an a factor in human history and in the future of humanity. He is worth all our care, worthy of all of our expenditure of effort, time and money, worthy of a far more discriminating and assiduous scientific study than he has ever been given. As the result of the ages and the progenitor of the future of humanity the child of to-day is entitled to the best breeding that possibly he can receive. His parentage should be far more the concern of society than it is. For the child has largest relations with the society at large, and society has a claim upon him which no family tie, no matter how sacred and beautiful that tie may be or just, can nullify or deny. So long as children con stitute an integral and important part of the social system, so long society ! will be under compulsion, to them as a matter of obligation and to itself I as a matter of self-concern, to procure for every child that is born into | the world the best birth that can be obtained- That is to say, that it ought ! to be impossible for a man to be permitted to get drunk by the consent of | the State so that in a state of maudlin intoxication he may be able to send j a soul into the world. That is to say, that it ought to be beyond the pale of possibility for any person who is mentally, morally or physically unfitted for the duties of parentage to enter into the contractual relations of wedlock. The State ought, and is under obligation, to provide for the future. The field of prenatal influence Is one which is too largely neglected. And yet, under the guidance of the wisdom of God, and in fidelity to the I Gospel of Jesus Christ, there is no more wonderful, as there is no more fruitful or sacred* field for study and research, than the life of hajaiaity ,n the fashioning. Why should we be so eternally mawkish? God "as? And shall we be ashamed of the wonderworking, of the hamNflftty tf deity? A woman should be ashamed not to know, a father should &e ashamed to neglect, the everlasting troth or Goa that tne prenatal me or a child has more influence upon its character and condition, its physical, mental, moral and spiritual capacities, than all the influences of after life combined can ever have. Knowing this we shall be more careful not to curse our children ibefore we send them into the'face of the hardships and trials of this earthly pilgrimage, trusting to the influences of the after life to overbalance and to eradicate those qualities that are, by our own unwisdom. quite ineradicable. Children deserve study and they amply repay it. The Government spends good money and much of it to study crops and cows and sewers and trolleys and posts and ships. It spends generous appropriations to make two ears of corn grow where one grew before, to eradicate lice on plants, to destroy the pests that destroy products that are valuable commercially. It teaches the horse breeder how to develop the horse and the farmer how scientifically to fertilize and plant and till and harvest and reap. Multitudes of men know more about the fine points of a dog than they do about the points of a child and how to develop them. But with a delightful lack of the sense of proportion and of the propriety of things we give spas<modic, poorly supported scientific examinations into the nature of the child, the best way to breed bim, the best way to develop him, the best way to improve him. And so we pack them off to the mines or we pack ,them with the same mental filling in the schools. We are tco busy or too lazy to understand them. The veterinarian for the dog that growls; , for the child, the lash. And simply because we do not understand or tske the trouble to. It is not badness in us so much as confession of total incapacity to know just what else to do. No two children are alike. No two of the same parentage are alike. Why, therefore, should we deal with them alike? No man would catalog a dachshund in the same elass with a j spaniel. Why, then, shall we class our children with nothing save ages to differentiate their scholastic ability? Why group dull boys and bright together simply because they happen to be of an age? Why group boys and girls of diverse tastes in the same category? Why? Because we are either too impotent or lazy to devise a better way. Children should not only be studied, but they should have their rights maintained. Their interests should be guarded. Their prerogatives should be conserved. No man should be permitted to steal their youth, no matter how profitable it may immediately be. It is a bad bargain in the long run to allow it. No man should be permitted to give them the taste tor drink or to gratify it. It is demoralizing. No man should be permitted to ply a business which will ruin their bodies and destroy their souls. No expediency and no private or political consideration whatsoever should be permitted to intrude itself between them and the fullest possible development of their faculties. If we cannot have coal without children being damned, then let us go without it. If we cannot have windows without children being damned, then let us go without them. If we cannot have clothes except at the expense of the soul careers of the youth of America, then let us go naked. It were far better that a mill stone should be hung about our necks and that we should be drowned in the depths of the sea than that by any fault or consent of ours God's little ones should be deprived of the fulness of life and of life eternal. There is nothing more criminal than the ignorance of their physical - - ... . .. . . -??- 1 1.1 f,.ryrr> *\ta beings tnat so many cniiaren DSVG. iviiiii v d uuy vt umu uc i^uiu cu^> i path that tends toward Vice, many a girl whose life is wrecked or is being cast upon the rocks of wickedness would be kept from the way that leadeth to perdition, if a little careful, wholesome parental advice had been given upon the sacred operations of our physical beings. It is no wonder that so many boys fall into evil ways and that so many gtfls are doomed to the life that is worse than death when so many fathers and mothers, so many Christian fathers and mothers, are so unnecessarily and so mistakenly, I had almost said so criminally, modest. For I know whereof I speak when I say that what a boy or girl fails to learn in a decent and godly manner from a father or mother is gathered in a wholly vicious and ungodly manner or in the bard school of unnecessary experience. Children should be instructed aDd inspired intellectually. The child is entitled to the finest results of the intellectual advances of the ages. It is for us to start the child where we have left off. All that precedes is simply of historic interest. It is explanatory, it is indicative, it is exemplary. But it should be only that. The less the retrogression our children make as practical laborers for the advancement of the world, the faster will be the progress of humanity toward the kingdom of Almighty God. But much as our children need to be instructed physically and intellectually, still more do tiiey require moral and spiritual guiding. For the social order depends upon a clean manhood and womanhood. The soul life of the world is dependent upon the clarity of the spiritual vision and the spiritual alertness of every human soul. Nothing is more important than that we should inculcate into the minds and souls of our youth a proper conception of the moral and spiritual realities of the universe. We shall be indeed childish if we think they can mature properly in these fields without experienced and expert guidance. The moral training of the formative years of a child's development will persist; the spiritual training that we afford our children in their callowest youth is the training that will endure. Nothing can eradicate it. and, with proper safeguarding and guidance, nothing in later life will be able to overthrow it. The moral oniHtnoi Hovdinnmpnt and culturius: of the child pays eternal divi OWU v?v ? v dends. It Is not sufficient that we shall instruct our children. It is needful that we shall take care that they be not misled or made to stumble. It is idle to instruct, the while we propagate and foster and palliate temptations that attack the very qualities we have been culturing. He is a poor cotton raiser who tests the quality of his cotton and the resistance of the plant with the boll-worm. Not otherwise is he a silly preceptor of the child who tests the moral and spiritual vigor of the cliiid with the factory, the dramshop and the woman of the unclean life. Children are naturally grateful to Almighty God. They may be easiest fitted to His kingdom. They are openminded. They are expectant. Their hearts are tender. Their souls are responsive to the invitations and ministrations of the Spirit. They welcome knowledge. They are without conceit. They are worthy of imitation. Their readiness to be informed, their susceptibility to divine impulses, their simplicity, their inaccessibility to importunate truth are patterns for us.. If we would rest upon the bosom of a loving Lord we must be like them. If ws would know God and enjoy Him we must become as a little child . ; .V- . - - /" *v FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervoos Diseases permanently cored by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 ArchSt., Phila., Pa COMPARISON. ! Mrs. Johnson (over the tub.)?Doan Ah mek yo' a good livin', Henry Clay Johnston? Mr. Johnston.?Tol'blc, chile?til*ble. But yo* sh'd have seen dd way mah mothah suppohtcd mah fathah! Beware of Ointments For Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole sys- 1 tern when entering it through the mucous ] surfaces. Buch articles sbouia never De usea except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.. contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of thesystem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's r'amily Pills for constipation. GEE! "I told her that in her presense my soul soared to empyrean heights or ineffable bliss." "And what did she say to that?" "She said, 'Gael'Louisville Courier-Journal. Mrs. Win ow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesmflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle The man who has no time for an occasional laugh needs a vacation. TELEGRAPHY IS State* represented in school. Life scholarship, books furnished and position guaranteed for J30.00. Write SOUTHERN BUS! FM bllkmsf Got Jfe * splitting headache! Mz^k Pains all over yon* V" bodyl Try ^ rjfl 0^3 Dispels all actus ID0I sod pains Immediately. fl " Becaiar Sises. Be and Me. S ill Bracelets. fl Sagacity of an Arizona Dog. A correspondent sends the follow* ing Interesting bit if testimony to Harper's Weekly: "In connection with the 'Animal Controversy' being discussed by the prominent naturalists and nature-writers of the country, I would like to cite the following case in support of Dr. Hornaday's belief in tne reasoning puwent ui ?uwmu that they do reason from cause to effect. "Mr. William Roberts, "who drives the stage from here to Quartzlte, has a dog who accompanies him on his trips. When the dog gets tired of running along beside the stage be jumps into the stage between the seats. When the stage is moving slowly, he jumps into the stage from the side, just clearing the rear wheel, but when the stage is moving swiftly, he jumps from a position a little to the rear of the wheel, alights on the rear .wheel, and the momentum throws him Into the stage. It surely was not Instinct or a natural impulse that led the dog to jump on to the swiftly moving wheel. But when we think of the little we know of the, workings of the human brain, is it not too much to presume to analyze that of an animal?" FORCE OF HABIT. Benham?Your hat is on the floor, mv dPAr. Mrs. Benham?Is it on straight?? Judge. EASY FOOD Ready For Instant Use Without Cooking. Almost everyone likes a cereal food of some kind at breakfast and supper, but the ordinary way of cooking cereals results in a pasty mass that is hard to digest, and if not properly i digested, the raw mass goes down I into the intestinal tract where gas is [ generated and trouble follows. Everyone knows that good food properly digested keeps the body well, while poor food, or even food of good quality that 1b poorly prepared and not digested, is sure to bring on some kind of disease. The easiest food to digest in this line is (jrape-fiuts, made irom wneat and barley, and cooked thoroughly at the factory, some 12 to 16 hours being consumed in the different processes of preparation. The food, therefore, is ready for instant service and the starch has been changed to & form of Sugar, so that it is pre digested and ready lor almost immediate absorption. A Chicago young lady writes that she suffered for years from indiges- ; tion and dyspepsia from the use of ' food that was not suitable to her powers of digestion. She says: "I began using Grape-Nuts, and I confess to having had a prejudice at first, and was repeatedly urged before I finally decided to try the food, but I have not known what indigestion is since using It, and have never been stronger or in better health. I have increased in weight from 109 to 124 pounds." People can be well, practically without cost, if they will adopt scientific food and leave off the indigestible sort. "There's a Rearon." Grape-Nuts Food is crisp and delicious to the taste. It should be served exactly as it comes from the package, without cooking, except in cases where it is made up into puddings and other desserts.?Book of delidous recipes, and "The Road to JVellvllle," in pkgs. ]t BACKACHE AND DESPONDENCY (gsRl? Are both symptoms of organic de- 1 ? rangement, and nature's warning to ?S??M JZL Slllil I i women of a trouble which will soon- fiBBj : eror later declare itself. l * ^ | Ho w often do we hear women say, \ I "It seems as though my back would At V-break." Yet they continue to drag | //*^ .Ui :xfjg along and suffer with aches in the I l/A\?, A^lj small of the back, pain low down in V y/A \\* *-s>rT*fr?ACZt>V aW :? the aide, dragging sensations, nerr- JAv^| ousness ana no amomoa. 11 / r// // *. -wuwaKvm iw ^ v.r They do not realize that the hack ^y!/ . 3??I is the main-spring' of woman's organ- * 1 ism and quickly indicates by aching MISS LENANAGEL K a diseased condition of the feminine organs or kidneys, and +hat and pains will continue until the cause is removed- ? Lydia E. Piokham's Vegetable Compound I made from native roots and herbs has been for many years the most m successful remedy in such cases. No other medicine has snch a record I Bof cures of feminine ills. Pi Miss LenaNagel, of 117 Morgan St., Buffalo, N. Y., writes:? ?Iwa? | completely worn out ana on uxo verge ui ueovus ^muauuu. r,j ia ^ ached all the time. I had dreadful periods of pain, was subject to fits I . of crying1 and extreme nervousness, and was always weak and tired, g ? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound completely cured me." B Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaints, B' such as Backache. Falling and Displacements, and all Organic Diseases. B Dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage. It strengthens and B tones the Stomach. Cures Headache and Indigestion and invigorates 3 the whole feminine system. B . Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women I Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.- Her advice is free. . ".*jg BOmnCEEPHTG SHORTHAND 1 i ?system md expert teacher*. Tuition only] Graham system tanxht by a reporter. 115.00 per month. Family board for 02.00 per month, [month. Typewriting free. Board 112.00, NESS COLLEGE AND TELEGRAPH SCHOOL, NEWNAN, QA. : W. L. DOUGLAS Jk. $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES JKlak WfiS^SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF-zsSft MM'9 'lUMfck . Jg _ **?~THE FAMILY, AT ALL FRICES. ^. Mm MBL %w?rS I S5E?SS: n&WSSru (thnn any othmr manafacturar. THE REASON W.L: Douglas shoes are worn by more people ^80^BHHgs? mmf in all walks oft if? than any other make is because of their t excellent style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities. ^nK^wflnv The selection o fthel eathers and other materials for each part > - ?< of the shoe and every detail of the making Lslooked after by ^ the most complete organizzU-jon of superintendents .foremen and iffin Tw r skilled shoemaker*, who receive the highest wages paid in the 5f *^Sg shoei ndustry, and whose workmanship cannot be excelled. ^SjSff/Mf If I could take youi nto myl am factories at Brockton .Mass., ~coH and show you how carefullyW.L. Douglas shoes are made, you v^Kf ;lv^ wouldtheri understand why thev hold theirshape, fit better, T V | wear! onger and are of greater value thai anv other make. K!8f^ttSUKSWfSSEffi!KftS5?teSflefe I ? - * r HnmU, atm Tf h. ew??rti?nhnlw VtKtlSd ' 'rW$H noBQMumie. ass youiueawtmi " ? ~v u@98M Erect to factory. Sh^9Bntevgfywfa?rebyin^C&Uiogtree. w. u. i*>ugm, orocgxon, mw , ^ tv tut ffiwwb protection manfrvfr^ ?^on^ W ? \ 1.^3 v i ^brj^ hhhp\ ,y Pi ^ f \ Clean-Light mBBwL?. -3 I 1 Ay Durable *392 : mm A /^ LI I M n rv 1 EYErywK<" | rm t n ii>ck ?8M I v*?r>y "* a.*t?w** cx>. aovron U.S.A. I ^ 1 i AND SUPPLlC . - ' Portable, Sutlonar? mad Traction Saiinea. BoUss*. H9 MATKJK.DC9H *** Gtl*wlJt- w<**i"'?*ia? * ? I WlB I I niVl ^ cle Will Machinery. Complete line anM la elaafc^i*! 4 If IV/ I 111 llw Write lor catalogue prioee. Addx mt all eoemenlwv *<'7| . L?kma to Atlanta. Ga. Wo hare ne ocnpectloao 'U? fM and grandmothers all orer this cocntry say JackaonTllla. fla. t too will rarely seed a doctoril you * . .... ' - rrgMM CUH3EBLAHD-EVERBU8IK6 j APR,L "Vo7uTy 4THApplied promptly ft gets right down to work and cores cots, boras, braises, bites, ffflf\! ft v rVV'M* JBlKw sprains, lameness and soreness. fj /'V^ o 'u ^Ni ^ 25e.,^tbreeSOc^All dealers. . AMsrrel of Be>i^??t .. M PORATABLE AND STATIONARY \y 'df " ENGINES! W I AND BOILERS 1==^?Satt, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors, Pumps and Fittings, Wood Saws, Splitters, K VAlaaw ^ Shafts, Pulleys, Belting, Gasoline Engines. g /y\fWHlTR 1 "*??"? LOMBARD, 'j Fccndjy, Machine and Bailer Worts tad Supply Ston, ' 1 ' "Or | AUGUSTA, GA. ? ^Semblances ef rwhdness na*prersdd so ff ? . I ffecttToly now-a-3ay? that they freocentfw M. ^TEo~"WE6?Sir*^s?E3M SE& I Nil I.BBHmI I Buggy" is an exception to tbs nils. MgWI ttajL 1 fllLr lllJbl^lwL They not only but mrt rood <Am?? M ' MtjmtwmmKgjU I &ttJtts?SZ1ft2S * <?j m.. I J? *neeInfInish?nd5Qotherfp!andMpoiflt* house- S**^^rit7.*nd yon hare the highest pe?* B ;.4s? MEn keeper's I '#cta? ttP? of. re hide on the msrlrsft B /;"/ &&& best friend. Grinds ^ _,;~T7 9 THE WH.TE STAR." B corn, wheat, breakfast cereals, gra- * 1; Manufart'jred on>r by B ggl ^^fflSNSSf^-SrS! I I ATUMfTA BUGGY cOTU* <* I. sM Wjvjffl long cranky Grirjda fast and won't I ^ If g BLACK HAWK QR1S7 MILL j P A B H|| E* ffli Is the nxfll yon onghtto bny. Plllsft I IP^ M 0 % iW? OCB at doien nsea, and soon saves its cost. I ?-m V-w V fiff I AND TIMRFP I .AMIS 119 your depot. Write for fr?? toofc. |*? ' lift A. H. PATCH, Mfr. of Hand Mills and I k jn Habersham county, Ga. m???????y 153.00 to J10.00 per acre. Write for litfcandJuMer. v-, H^Tiionipson'sEyeWater|-?? m " 1 1. 1 . . 1 ? .. .. 1 1 - .. ... . . t .>1^1 jam hum 111 inmim 11111111 inmiiiiiiiii a ? /SXWintersinith's I (^acmhh tonic i 7 v H 8 alsiu . ?>tanatM tor so years: leaves no mm effects m &sma S / ? y Bj Clir3S CllilfiS ,lhe quinine; pleasant to take; children like it, H /y ,,n seldom fails to make permanent care. . . *^?SB vaita ?$ m Guaranteed under Food and Drags Act of Jane Malarial Fevers 30, 1906. At your druggists; or ssnt prepaid 8 ^hCHlLLS^r on receipt of price. , 50capd $1 flRfHUR PETER & CO.. Sea'l Agfa. Louisville. Ky ? "> CRESCENT ANTISEPTIC jg|y GREATEST HEALER KNOWN TO SCIENCE. gjjgjff W Non Poiaouoas, Non Irritating. Allays Inflammation tad at ope 3 pain from any cause. As strong as carbolic acid and as harmleee as . -?r| BEftek u A srweet milt. Cores burns instantly; cores old and chronic eoneep \&J^ cores sores and inflammation from any cause on man or beast. fW fowls?cures cholera, sore head and roup. Satisfaction positive^! 1.;,^ for Sal* by rU TlnUTiMs Defers. klgd. by CRESCENT CHEMICAL Od? FU TTaiMfr Tlin^f ^