Newspaper Page Text
B MERCANTILE COM
The Mercantile Company has contracted fog this
space foe the next twelve months, and It will he decidedly to
yottt interest to watch it from week to week as they unfold to
yo« the ««a.«iy bargains they will offer from time to time.
D
Mercantile Co.,
Food Law in Effect.
Washington, D. 0. Dec. 80.—
Jo more are we to have the red
emonade or the bright cherries
n the seductive cocktails,
jreen candy is to become a
hingof the past and sawdust
vill be missing from the break
last foods.
“Unto the pure all things are
3 ure, but unto them that are de
lied is nothing pure.”
Beginning to day all things in
the food and drink line are to be
pure, providing the new pure
food law which is to go into ef
fect on that day accomplishes
the ends sought by those who
framed it ignorance will not be
tolerated as an excuse for violat
ing the new law. If there is any
manufacturer or dealer through
out the length and breadth of
the land who is not familiar with
its provisions it is not the fault
of the government. For weeks
the agricultural department has
been busy mailing the new regu
lations to those interested in the
law. . . .
The main provisions ox tne
law have been discussed so much
since the measure was enacted
last sDring as to have become
generally familiar with the pub
lic, The regulations as to adul
teration affect all drug and med
icines as well as food articles.
Factories will be required to
be open at all times for inspec
tion. Labels must not in any
■way misrepresent the products
to which they are attached. Ar-
ti ial coloring matter in foods
and drinks will be largely done
away with.
The government >s preparing
for tlfe strictest enforcement of
the law. Federal inspectors will
be kept busy buying samples in
the open market to be tested and
’palyzed. The only way the re-
\ dealers can hope to escape
Venalty of the law is to be
' \show that the manufac-
Jjholesale merchant gave
^Vanty that the articles
Koi!
conformed with the regulations.
Then it will he up to the manu
facturing or wholesale merchant
to explain.
To Serve February Term, 1907,
Paulding Superior Court.
Protect Your Town.
Protect your own town and
thereby show that you are in fa
vor of protection. If protection
is good for the nation it is good
for the town. As towns-people
we should favor our town above
every other, as the growth and
development of it is what will
enhance the value of all proper
ty both in and about it.
Then buy your dry goods, gro
ceries, hardware, furniture, etc.,
at home; have your printing
your 'blacksmithing and your
shoe-making done at home; pat
ronize home in every instance
that you can.
The success of our merchants
and mechanics means new busi
ness houses and residences, ad
ditional demands for labor of va
rious kinds.
To the farmer a first-class town
affords a better market for his
produce, a better trading point,
and such a town is bound to in
crease the value of his land. Un
questionably “in union there is
strength.
Let us protect our town.
Cured of Lung Trouble.
“Ii is now eleven years since 1
had a narrow escape from con
sumption,” writes 0. O. Floyd, a
business man of Kershaw, S. 0.
“I had run down in weight to
135 pounds, and coughing was
constant, both by day and by
night. Finally I began taking
Dr. King’s New Discovery, and
continued this for about six
months, when my cough and
lung trouble were entirely gone
and 1 was restored to my normal
weight, 170 pounds.” Thousands
of persons are healed every year
Guaranteed at Cooper’s drug
store. Price 50c.
They say “Money talks;” but
Money has never been a member
of a successful firm, where Brains
was not a silent partner.
GRAND JURORS.
W. J. Grogan.
W. J. Tidwell.
John Hitchcock.
J. Z. Howard.
W. L. Meadows.
J. H. Davis.
F. J. Smith.
S. Robertson.
G. W. Cole.
W. T. McEver.
A. A. Hicks.
J. C. Pickett.
A. B. Clonts, Jr.
J. F. Welch.
N. J. Neely.
J. M. Sanders.
J. M. Holland.
J. L. Crowley.
T. L. Varner.
H. C. Scoggins.
W. E. Crew.
J. J. Brown.
W. J. Ellis.
Spencer Malone.
R. B. Bullard.
Robt. Lee.
R. T. Grogan.
M. E. Cantrell.
J. A. Grogan.
T. J. Tibbltts.
TRAVERSE JURORS—FIRST WEEK.
J. N. Weems.
J. A. Craton.
A. L. Adair.
J. R. Kincaid.
Jas. W. Woodall.
J. C. Pearson.
A. A. Hay.
O. J. Henderson.
T. J. Cochran.
J. W. Turner.
J. E. Estes.
John F. Baker.
J. M. Williams.
W. E. Williams.
W. T. Fannin.
R. H. Catheart.
R. A. D. Head.
J. M. Dupree.
L. W. Harris.
J. Robt. Cole.
A. O. Thomas.
J. C. Meek.
J. Q. Clonts.
F. M. Mosley.
Alex Sinyard.
F. M. Davis.
S. P. Clonts.
S. T. Dunaway.
J. L. Foster.
K. G. Cochran,
J. P. Jones.
S. M. Roberts.
L. F. Grogan.
J. H. Bullock.
G. T. Welch.
W. 8. Conn.
TRAVERSE JURORS—SECOND WEEK.
J. R. Atcheson.
A. W. Drlskell.
W. A. King.
G. W. Smith.
J. M. Butler.
J. W. McMIchen.
A. T. Armstrong.
T. J. Brooks.
H. J. Akin.
H. C. Klker.
C. T. Gunnell.
J. O. Underwood.
G. W. Portwood.
C. O. Hunt.
E. W. Y. Allgood.
T. J. McLendon.
W. C. Spinks.
J. M. Kennedy.
L. M. Pearson.
V. L. Alley.
S. C. Pearson.
Isaac Austin.
W. M. Woodall, Jr.
Bally Bone.
B. L. Camp.
C. W. Pilgrim.
John' Shell.
W. P. Cooper,
j. M. Chapman.
J, T. Howell.
J. M. Kemp.
X. c. Meadows.
A. H. Mosley.
G. A. Maner.
Z. C. Cole. ,
B. H. Eberhart.
J. B. Tho nas.
Kobt. Cole, Odfth Wills and Atkinson
Fuller, entered tho third grade.
Jessie Adair, Carl McAdams and
Waltoel Bullock entered the fourth
grade.
Messrs. Henry Roberts, Grover
Couch, and Misses Maude McAdams
and Gertie Brooks entered the sixth
grade.
Wood Abies, Levi Harris, Robt.
Lee, Hugh Starr, Nicholas Neely,
Arthur Hart, Ossie Hart, Grover
Fuller, and Fred Durham and Misses
Minnie Legget and Willie Rogers
entered the fifth grade.
MlssyDoggett, who has charge of
tho primary grades, has onrolled
eighty pupils. The new ones are:
Frank Smith, George Smith, Roinle
Cain, Tom Lawler, Edison Babb,
Ernest Babb, Clarence Pinkard, C. L.
Brooks, Otis Watson, Buren Wheel
er, Bessie Sosehee, Eula Cain,
Bertha Cain and Daisy Adaway.
Misses Minnie Mobley, Nettle Lee)
Florence Butler, and Messrs. Boyd
Ragsdale and Howell Rogers have
entered the soventh grade.
Prof. Ezsard still has the same fif
teen ; and though we are small In
number, we hope to so apply our
selves that we may not onlv gain
credit for oiirsolves but for our
teacher, who has labored so faith
fully with us for tho past four years.
Tone Foster.
Lula Davis.
A Square Deal
School Notes.
With happy recollections of yule-
tide festivities still vivid 111 their
minds, the pupils of our school re
sumed their scholastic duties Wed
nesday morning, after having had a
rest from study for ten days. Until
the bright days of May have nearly
run their course, the pupils will de
vote most of their time to their
books. After that, comes the sum
mer vacation, which is now the an
ticipation and hope of every boy and
girl, many of whom are already
planning how and where those hap
py days will be spent.
There are present today [two hun
dred and twenty pupils. This is a
great increasolhut many more are
expected to enter before the close of
the spring term.
Cliflord Legget, Lonnie Cole, Ar
thur Smith,JGay Cole, Carl Adair,
Is assured you when you buy one of Dr.
Pierce’s family medicines—for all tho In
gredients entering Into them are printed
on tho bottlo-wrappera and their formula
are attested under oath as being complete
and correct. You know just what you are
paying for and that tho Ingredients ore
gathered from Nature’s laboratory, being
selected from tho most valuable native
medicinal roots found growing In our
American forests and while potent to cure
are perfectly harmless even to tho most
delicate women and children. Not a drop
of alcohol enters Into their composition.
A much better agent Is used both for ex
tracting and preserving tho medicinal
principles used In thorn, vl/..—pure triple-
refined glycerine. This agent possesses
Intrinsic medicinal properties of Its own,
being a most valuahle antl-septlc and antl*
ferment, nutritive and soothing dcinul-
C< Glvcerlne plays an Important part In
Dr Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery In
tho cure of Indigestion, dyspepsia and
weak stomach, attended by sour risings,
heart-hum, foul breath, coated tongue,
poor appetite, gnawing feeling In stom
ach, biliousness and kindred derange
ments of the stomach, liver and bowels.
Resides curing all the above distressing
ailments, the “Golden Medical Discovery”
is a specific for all diseases of the mucous
membranes, an catarrh, whether of the
nasal passages or of the stomach, bowels
or pelvic organs. Even in its ulcerative
stages it will yield to this sovereign rem
edy if its use be persevered in. In Chronic
Catarrh of the Nasal passages, it is well,
while taking the "Golden Medical Dis-
covory ” for tho necessary constitutional
treatment, to cleanse tho passages freely
two or threo times a day with Dr. Huge s
Catarrh Remedy. This thorough course
(ft treatineut generally cures the worst
cases. ...
In coughs and hoarseness caused by bron
chial, throat and lung affections, except con
sumption In Its advanced stages, the "Gulden
Medical Discovery” Is a most efficient rem
it you don’t know your own
business thoroughly you can not
point out the mistakes yonr sub
ordinates make; and that ia your
business.
The Right Name.
Mr. August Sharpe, the popu
lar overseer of the poor, at Fort
Madison, la., says: “Dr. King’s
New Life Fills are rightly named;
they act more agreeably, do
more good and make one fee)
better than any other laxative.”
Guaranteed to cure biliousness
and constipation. 545c at Coop
er’s drug store.
“Plenty of room at the top”
is an old saying; but the trouble
frequently is that the fellow at
the top thinks there is only room
for himself.
Your looney refunded if after lisp
ing throe fourths of f‘l-4) of a tube of
ManZan, you are dissatisfied. Re
turn the balance of the tube to your
druggist, and your money will be
cheerfully returned. Take advant
age of this offer. At Cooper’s drug
store.
ManZan Pile Remedy put up in
convenient collapsible tubes with
nozzle attachment so that the rem
edy may be applied at the very seat
of the trouble, thus relieving almost
instantly bleeding, itching or pro
truding piles. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded. At Coop
er’s drug store.
tne DrOnCQlBI IUUIXJU* umuiLT anus, auu
covcrj ” It not so good for acute coughs aris
ing from sudden colds, nor must it be ex
pected to cure consumption in its advanced
gtages—no medicine will do that—but for all
the obstinate, chronic coughs, which, if neg
lected, or badly treated, lead ud to consump
tion* ii la the best medicine that can be taken.
’Phone the L. & L.
market No. 55 for
meats of all kinds.
Promptly delivered..
Highest price paid for
hides. Located in
Lawrence warehouse.