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Safe, Sound
.
and*Profitable;
'
Not A Speculation
Would you like to in
vest SSOOOO, in five
equal monthly install
ments, that will, in our
opinion, make you inde
pendent for life?
For assistance in driv
ing our big tunnel, we
offer an interest in
twelve rich, proven
mines, which have pro
duced $2,000,000.00 in a
camp that is producing
$1,020,000.00 a month,
Sdbscriptions $50.00 to
$1,000.00 on installment.
WRITE
NATIONAL MINING & TU_NNELCO
LYNCHBURG, VA,
’ Living too high has lald many a
man low. £
For COLDS and GRIP.
Hick’s CAPUDING is the best remedy—
e.vn the aching and feverishness—cures
Cold and restores norgnal conditions. It's
Mquid—effects immedgiply. 10c., 25c. and
90, &t drug stores
3 Coin F: n Lincoln Farm.
While e ; ; on the Lincoln
: to laying the foun-
S ¥Memorial buildings
g *¥Pmpletion, Robert H.
;I Jof the hands employed
= WOrk, picked up a Spanish
Baring the date 1772. Not
== =Bof the valuable history which
% attached to this little coin,
‘} ow took it home and his
¥ have been using it as a play
htil last Monday, when Dr.
“'Rodman called to wait on a
of typhoid fever in the family,
e chanced to see it. From Mr.
vhitlow he learned how he cdme in
possesgion of it, and aiso secured
permission from Mr. Whitlow to re
tain it and to bring the matter into
public notice.
The coin is well worn, and. from
fts every appearance, must have been
Jost a hundred years ago. It would
do no violence to our imagination, nor
yet strain a historical point to as
swme that this same little coin was:
once the property « ' Thomas Lincoln,
and that his distinguished son once
made it a plaything as did the chil
dren of its more recent cwner.—
Larue County Herald.
A SHORTER LBEASE.
*“He says he's your friend for life.
Bays you loaned him $50.”
%S 0 I did. But he’s not my friend
for life. I propose to ask him for it
next pay day.”—Louisville Courier-
Journal. % .
THE DOCTOR'S WIFE
Agrees With Him About Food.
A trained nurse says: “In the prac
tice of my profession I have found so
many points in favor of Grape-Nuts
food that I unhesitatingly recommend
it to all my patients.
“It ig delicate and pleasing to the
palate (an essential in food for the
'gsick) and can h 2 adapted to all ages,
'‘being softened with milk or cream
'for babies or the aged when deficien
gy of teeth renders mastication im
‘possible. For fever patients or those
on liquid diet I find ‘Grape-Nuts and
albnmen water very nourishing and
refreshing.’
“This recipe {8 my own idea and is
made as follows: Soak a teaspoonful
wof Grape-Nuts in a glass of water for
‘an hour, strain and serve with the
beaten white of an egg and a spoon
ful of fruit juice for flavoring. This
affords a great deal of nourishment
that even the weakest stomach can
ssimilate without any distress.
‘My husband is a physician and he
Grape-Nuts himself and orders
inv times for his patients.
ersonally I regard a dish of
ape-Nuts with fresh or stewed fruit
the ideal breakfast for anyone—
ell or sick.” :
- In any case of stomach trouble,
nervous prostration or brain fag, a
10-day trial of Grape-Nuts will work
'wonders toward nourishing and re
'bufiding and in this way ending the
‘;tmuble.
~ “There’s a Reason,” and trial
proves.
Look in pkgs. for the famous little
book. ‘“The Road to Wellville.”
. Rver read the aboveletter? A new
pme appears from time to time. . They
E genuine, true, and full of human
SR . A L
4,002 Foreign and Domestic
Firms Have Registered.
Charters Have Been lssued to 115 New
Corporations During the Past
Year.
Atlanta, Ga.—Reports have heenre
seived at the secretary of slates’ of
fice showing the number of corpora
tions, foriegn and domestic, now do
ing business in the state. There were
on June 24, 4,002 corporations regis
tered, 3,306 domestic and 696 foreign,
gince that time 115 new corporations
have received charters or been li
censed to do business,
So far 1,769 domestic corporations
have failed to register, The amount
jue from corporations registered last
vear, which have not paid this year,
is $884.50. The cost of registration is
$1 for the first year and fifty cents for
each renewal, The time for registra
tion expires November 1,
FAMOUS SON OF GEORGIA.
Captain Butt of Augusta Now a Na
tional Character,
Augusta, Ga.—One of the most con
gpicuous figures and at the same time
one of the most popular members of
the presidents’ staff on the trip across
the continent, is a native Georgian,
a man who began his carecr in an
humble way in the Empire State of
the South, and who has won his offi
cial spurs, so to speak, by a com
manding presence and a will that
knew no such word as fail
This man is Captain Archibald W.
Butt, who was once a newspaper re
porter in Augusta, Ga, He is now the
president’'s military aide.
Captain Butt is now with President
Taft, and will visit Georgia with the
presidential party this fall on the re
turn trip to Washington.
TO HARNESS TALLULAH FALLS.
An 18,000-Horsepower Development is
Planned for That Point,
Columbus, Ga.—The Georgia and
Alabama Industrial Index says, in its
regular weekly issue:
“The swift-descending water of Tal
lulah Falls, whose picturesque beauty
forms one of the greatest natural at
tractions in the state of Georgia, are
soon .to enter upon another phase of
service to man, for in addition to de
lighting his eye with their loveliness,
they are, in the form of utilized and
directed power, to administer to his
wants. The power rights at these
famous falls have been sold for SIOO,-
000, and an 18,000-horsepower devel
opment is planned for that point. The
power will be transmitted through the
mountains of northwest Georgia and
on ‘copper wires will race down to
Atlanta as electri¢ current, there to
turn the wheels of industry.
NO RECEPTION AWAITS TAFT.
Columbus Considers Proposed Stop
Near Visit. .
Columbus, Ga.—Columbus is much
interested in the suggestion that in
traveling from Birmingham to Macon
early in November President Taft
change his original route and make
that section of his journey via At
lanta instead of this city.
Since the people here continue to
refuse to recognize a pass-through as
a viist or even a near visit, they
would not suffer any keen disappoint
ment if the president so shape his af
fairs that it will not be necessary for
him to pass through this city at all
Such a suggestion would never, of
course, b¢ made to President Taft.
It is probable that none of the city
officiais will go to the station, al
though if the president does adhere
to his original routes and not travel
via Atlanta, but through Columbus, it
is presumed that he will not lack for
a crowd at the station, as the color
ed Young Men’s Christian Associa
tion, the Chattanoochee Valley Eman
cipation Proclamation Association and
the Sons and Daughters of Heaven,
and perhaps other negro organiza
tions, will be out in force to greet
him.
TO BUILD SUBURBAN LINES.
Cities in Southern and Central Por
tion of State to Be Connected.
Macon, Ga.—Within the next week.
developments in the interurban rail
way movement promise many good
things for the scores of bhusiness men
here and throughout the central and
gsouthern portion of the state who have
heen eager to gather assurances that
the lines will soon be in operation.
Those who are closely associated in
the business enterprises state that by
October 1 announcements from the
general offices here will be made that
will be ‘received with a great deal of
satisfaction. . b
This will probably mean that the
union of interests between the local
streetl railway- company, the" interur
ban lines and the Central Georgia
Power Company. is so well planned:
that only the business formality of
passing the boards of directors and
the stockholders in each company will
be the only remaining duty to be ac
complished.
AUGUSTA GETS RAILROAD SHOPS.
Georgia and Florida Railway Shops
Will Be Moved from Douglas.
Douglas, Ga.—The offices of the
Georgia and Florida Railway will be
moved at once from this place to Au
gusta. This announcement was made
by General Manager J. M. Turner.
The shops of the road which have
just been completed at a cost of
$300,000 will yemain here, =~
y ‘4,_\ oy i "_‘ 1y v 5 )‘ o
O emt e a et
That a cavalryman unhorsed is the
most easily cowed?
That one can show his temper only
after he has lost it?
\ That a contractor should be called
upon to expand a house?
. That no young man ever rose rap
idly till he had settled down?
That the plow must be solled be:
fore the soil can be plowed?
That a susceptible fellow is hard:
est hit by the softest glances?
That in everything (except base
ball) you must strike out to make a
hit?
That manyv students cannot state
bald facts without splitting halrs?
That the papers often refer to a
man's double life as a singular ea
reer?—Success Magazine,
Ethics cannot turn a flend to an
angel at they will make a man me
ditative. A meditative mind is hardly
ever dangerous,
i s
| ° °
Cured by Lydia E. Pink
’
‘ham’s Vegetable Compound
- MArLTON, N.J.—I feel that LydiaE.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound l}xfas
ie SO ven me new e.
\ g”&&*’ S T suffered for ten
| g@" G ¥ears with serious
e N emale troubles, in-
PR Y flammation, ulcer
fi B aF~ T ation, indigestion
i 5 nervousness, and
O o could mnot sleep.
| ,f s Doctors gave me
7¥4 SR 4R up, as they said my
5T troubles were
o™ chronic. I was in
despair,and did not
| care whetherllived
or died, when I read about Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com;iound; so I
began to take it, and am well again and
relieved of all my suffering.’” — Mrs.
. ((EORGE JORDY, Box 40, Marlton, N.J.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
’go’und, made from native roots and
erbs, contains no narcotics or harm
ful drugs, and to-dag holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases we know of, and
thousandsof voluntarytestimonialsare
on file in the Pinkham laboratory at
Lynn, Mass., from women who have
been cured from almost every form of
female coniplaints, inflammation, ul
ceration, displacements, fibroid tumors,
.irregularities, periodic pains, backache,
indigestion and nervous prostration.
Every sufierin% woman owes it to her
self to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound a trial.
If you wouid like special advice
about your case write a confiden
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkbam, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
[. and always helpful.
FOR OUT DOOR WORK
IN THE WETTEST WEATHER
I NOTHING EQUALS
/63", {OWERg
[EE e
1\ Nar Assra®
‘A | B WATERPROOF
A 113 OILED
Y GARMENTS
,‘) \ THEY 100 K WELL- WEAR WELL
$ N\ A WILLNoT LEK
PYENE \ LONG COATS -*392 _#32
SIEN) " surts 30
WRRZIRNT=S 5010 EVERYWHERE
0 CATALOG FREE
A.J.Tower CO. BOSTON,USA.
TowER CANADIAN CO. LIMITED = TORONTO, CAN.
. The people whom one c¢an fool are
not worth fooling so it is inexplicable
why the game of fooling is continu
ously played.
CURES RHEUMATISM, BONE PAINS
" _ACHING BACK.
" To all safferers of rheumatism, whether
museular or of the joints, sciatica, lumba-
F gos, backache, pains in the kid
g N ney or neuralgia pains, bone
. ga¥ pains, even the worst eld cases,
‘ ) sbouldtake B. B. B. (Botanic
i ABF Blood Balm), which has re
,\,g peatedly cured all of these
t\i tortures. You eure yourself at
A home as thousands will testify—
T po change of climate being
necessary, 8.8.8. banishes uric acid from
the blood. looszens the stiffened joints, pu
riflee the blood, and brightens the oye,
giving elasticity and tone to the system,
, curing the worst case of rheumatism. B.
B.:B. is & liquid preparation, thoroughly
tedied for pas: 25 years. Sold by all drug
xig.sts at $1 per bottle, with complete di
regtions. c~ample free by writing to Blood
_Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble
. and Iree medical advice given. :
“‘For months I had great trouble with my
stomach and used all kinds of medicines.
My ‘tongue has been actually as green as
grass, my breath having a bad odor. Two
weeksagp a friend recommended Cascarets
and.after using them I can willingly and
cheerfully say that they have entirely
cured me. I therefore let you know that I
shall recommend them to any one suffer
ing from such.troubles.”—Chas. H. Hal.
perxy; 114 E. 7th St., New York, N, Y.
Pleksant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good,
Do Goed. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe.
10c, %oe¢. Never sold in bulk, The gen
-4 %filot stamped CC C. Guaraateed to
i 3 .ogyw,nmykw; e B
To Publishers and Pri
o Publishers an rinters,
WE MANUFACTURE THE VERY HIGHEST
" GRADE OF
Type Brass Galleys
Brass Rule in Strips Metal Borders
Brass Labor Saving Rule - L. 8. Metal Furniture
Brass Column Rules Leads and Slugs :
Brass Circles Metal Leaders
Brass Leaders Spaces and Quads,
Brass Round Corners 6 to 48 Point
Brass Leads and Slugs Metal Quoins, etc.
Old Column Rules refaced and made good as new
at a small cost,
Please remember that we are not in any Trust or
' Combination and are sure that we can make it great
ly to your advantage to deal with us,
” A copy of our Catalogue will be cheerfully furnish
ed on application, 2 A
: We frequently have good bargains in second hand Job :
. Presses, Paper Cutters and other printing machinery.
PHILADELPHIA PRINTERS’ SUPPLY CO.,
qn ~———Manufacturers of-—— :
. Type and High Grade Printing Material. G
PROPRIETORS 39 North Ninth Street
PENN TYPE FOUNDRY PHILADELPHIA
TR R
HAVE YOU THOUGHT ABOUT IT?
That the doctrine of home rule has
ever .been a principle dear to the
hearts of our southern people, and
the patronizing of home institutions
is simply the application of this prin
ciple to our daily and individual ne
cessities,
Never before in the history of the
south has southern people so exten
sively bought, sold and traded in all
lines among its home people. For
illugtration, take a single inslance:
Not many years ago, the farmer LOOK
his cotton to town and sold it. That
cotton was shipped north, made into
products by northern and eastern
mills and sent back for that same
farmer to buy. Now he takes his coi
ton to town and sells it, in a great
mary instances, to a cotton mill in
his home town, It is converted into
manufactured product within a few
miles of where the cotton itself was
produced.
Not alone in cotton, but in many
other lines, hundreds of products
bought and used by southern people
are manufactured in the south,
This means developing the different
sections of the south in the expendi
ture of money for the building of
these manufacturing plants and in
the expenditure of money in the em
ployment of labor. Every dollar spent
in this way ‘is beneficial to you be
cause it enriches and develops your
home section.
The same article applies identically
to life insurance.
The Empire Life Insurance Compa
ny is a purely mutual, old line, legal
reserve, southern institution, with its
Home Office in Atlanta, Georgia. Its
funds are received in the way of pre
mium payments from the people of
the south. Its funds go back to the
people of the south in the way of pol
jcy loans, payment of death claims
and policy dividends.
Its reserve funds are invested in
bonds of southern states and southern
towns and cities; also, in firsi mort
gages on farms and other town prop
erty of southern people. All of which
means the using of southern money
for the development and enriching of
this southern country and southern
institutions.
Therefore, when you can get jusi
as good, if not better, policy in just
as good a company by taking your
lite insurance in the Empire Life, ask
yourself to patronize a home company
rather than to send your premium
payments off five hundred or a thou
sand miles away to some eastern or
northern company.
The Empire Life is safe and sound
and conservative in its management.
It pays its claims promptly. Then
give us your business,
EMPIRE LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Home Office
ATLANTA, . . . . . GEORGIA
T. R. KNIGHT,
District Agent, Hazlehurst, Ga.
9 Generations of live, wide
awake American Boys have
obtained the right kind of
FIREARM EDUCATION
by being equipped with the |
unerring, time-honored
STEVENS
All i d
Sg’onilx,x?g oodsvfdefi%fnv:: !ixea:(;lle
STEVENS. If you cannot obtain,
we willship direct, express prepaid
upon receipt of Catalog Price.
Send 5 cents in stamps for
160 Page [llustrated Catalog.
Replete with
N b
[| " 83, (& | &rearm in
& S |t son.
\‘.x"'/ S(:rflml;?ttnt:gover
\\fl‘ SV in colors.
\\ v /
‘l‘%’ oi® g STEVENS
; ARMS & TOOL CO.
NN P.o.Bex 400 o
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The Queen of Fashions.
Richest and choicest creations are
most elegantly and perfectly repro
duced on the Standard Rotary.
The World’s Best Sewing
Machine.
The only machine which makes abso
lutely perfect lock and chain stitch
ing on the same machine.
Ladies.
When you are in need of a sewing
machine, you no doubt intend to give
the matter intelligent consideration
and should buy one which will last
a lifetime, the Standard Rotary.
You Owe It to Yourself
To learn how the Standard Rotary
will do more and better work in less
time, and with more real comfort and
pleasure than any other machine
made. Send for circular,
The Standard Sewing Machine Co,,
§ Atlanta, Ga.
Agents wanted, :
PIANO FREE
| it
E OLD TIME SONG BOOK 10 CENTS.
|
! GOLD PLATED RING FREE
i WITH EACH ORUER
: : FOR SONG
f BOOK.
5 52 dear old tunes we ail love, words
!and music compieie lol' piaird Or OF
| gan, for 10 cents. Asuciica, ANNie
| Laurie, Auld Lang o, v, suwie Hymn
| of the Republic, Laiin wue ounsnne,
| Columbia, Comin’ 4 .iv . nye, Lar
| ling Nellie Gray, il.aie. waud, riag
‘ot the Free, Haili ouiuaivia, dome,
Sweet Home, Juaiiiic, ..cwa Bandly
! Light, Lilly Dale, iiCi ..ov, narcalng
Thro’ Georgia, diusowo i LLE Coid
lGround, My Bonie, .., wmaryland,
| Old Kentucky kiviie, <.u piack Joe,
| Robin Adair, Kucked o we Cradle
of the Deep, Swalce (ii.u, oweet and
Low, Blue Beils ol . ouaud, Last
Rose of Summei, wiu seacu Bucket,
Star Spangled sannc:, - wcaint Chair,
Those Evening Lcii., iicwy, Tramp,
Tramp, Uncle Ned, weie 4 caving To
!nixht, When the o weaiuws roweward
Fly and twenty otlicie lor lUG, stamps
or coin. Particulai- 0x vur great of
fer of a Piano Freo ivi a uille assist
‘ance in your Owil <o 18 encioscd
with the song boui. rou can earm
'a piano by meici, alowing your
‘peighbors to se il, 1 you send at
‘once, For a shoit tiwe we will send
a -gold plated finger liGg rREE as a
‘souvenir to each oue who sends a
dime for the song buok. Send today
to Piano and Music 0., Gdlesburg,
Hi. ts
BONDS AT 80 CENTS.
An old established manufactory @
high class goods desires to secure 2 -
little more capital to meet the in
creasing demand for their product. It
offers a small issue of 6 per cent cou
pon bonds at 80c on the sl. $25 bond
for S2O. SIOO bond for SBO. For full
particulars ~P.ddress Drawer 52, Gales- .
o R i S el T eSTb DA G