The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, September 17, 1914, Image 9

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'The Atlanta Constitution’s 1914 Clubbing Offers with Yearly Subscriptions Only. The Tri-Weekly Constitution. Saturday, three times SXttov a y n $ D l revi O uU ith f U Tr SeleCt a “ y ° ne ° f the dubbing offeree Tali cWg“* Make se| ection ONLY ONE with each yearly subscription from among these $1.90 club offers. rhe SI.OO Offers of Monthly Magazines. Only one allowed with each yearly Sub scription. Today’s Magazine of New York, monthly. McCall’s Magazine of New York, monthly. The Housewife of New York, monthly. The SI.OO Offers with Week ly Newspapers. Only one allowed with each yearly Sub scription. I oledo Blade of Toledo, Ohio, a weekly Newspaper. Commercial Appeal of Memphis, Tenn., a weekly. The Semi-Monthly Farm Papers SI.OO. Only one allowed with each yearly Sub scription. Home and Farm of Louisvlle, Ky. inland Farmer of Louisville. Ky. Southern Cultivator of Atlanta, Ga. SI.OO Triple Magazine Offer The Family, The Household Journal and Floral life, and Farm News—all three of these monthly magazines published at Sprirgfield, Ohio, with the subscription to Tri-weekly—sl,oo. Any ONE, ONLY ONE, the subscriber’s choice of the above splendid offers free by mail with SI.OO yearly subscription to Tn-Weekly Constitution, no other club offer or premium being allowed when ONE offer is accepted as above. Address all Orders and remittances to 0. B. ATKINSON, Gainesville, Georgia. OUR BUSINESS IS BANKING j Our effort is to attend to that business, i Our aim is to please. Our wish, to succeed. f Your patronage will be appreciated. Your interest will be cared for. Try ijs and lon’ll be Pleased STATE BANKING CO., T. E. ATKINS, W. R. WINBURN President. Cashier. R. J. SANDERS, Vice-Pres. GAINESVILLE RAILWAY AND POWER CO OWNEDi LOCALLY Furnish Street Car Service, Electric Lights and Power Reduced Rates on Cars by Purchase of Street Car Tickets. Schedule and Prices Furnished at Office The Route-Builder Offer That makes your mail box mean something at SI.OO Tri-Weekly Constitution, one year. Farm and Fireside, the National Farm Pa per, one year. Also the weekly Alabama Times, of Mont gomery, Ala., one year. All for the price of only one dollar. Pair of 8-inch Shears. National Handy Package. Hawkeye Combination Fence Pliers. Pair of nice Towels. Black Leather Purse or bill fold. Double Combinations for Farmers. Only one set allowed with one subscrip tion. If you are farming we can supply you, free, a special paper you may need, par ticularly in poultry raising, dairy farming and fruit growing. This in addition to The Tri-Weekly Constitution and the Southern Ruralist, both one year. See these splendid offers. Tri-Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, Ofl/v Southern Ruralist, Atlanta, Will Jr Southern Poultry Journal, Dallas, jl Texas. Tri-Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, 3 Southern Ruralist, Atlanta, I Vatu Kimball’s Dairy Farmer, Waterloo, ( " vaf lowa. f O/ . Tri-Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, . Southern Ruralist, Atlanta, L3Cll Southern Fruit Grower, Chattanoo- ■ ga, Tenn. I Jtl Week-End Rates. ! Round trip week-end rates from I Gainesville, to all Gainesville Mid -1 land Railway Stations. Two trains 1 daily, tickets sold every Saturday • and Sunday, limited to following I Monday. Two connections daily via Monroe for Augusta, Ga., and va rious points. Connections at Athens with Seaboard, Central and Georgia I R. R. I R. L. Mobley, T. P. A., W. B. : Veazey, Traffic Manager. Gaines ■ ville, Ga. I Are You a Woman ? Cardui I The Woman’s Tonic I FOR £AL£ AT ALL DRUGGISTS E F 4 Wood’s Scckls Crimson Clover T’n ISost Sc'l-Lrrrc> ' ng and Fertilizing Crop for The South. Largely Increases the Yield cl vorrj, CotUi and Tobacco. Costs less than per -.-re ; . to s . ■?, and the crop turned v.n- ; der t~. considered worth ca? 'y ! I S2O.U to $30.00 per acre in the i increase! productive’!*??'! anc; and imp oved mechanical con- . dition of L.! soil. Wood's Oop Special giving j practical experience of farmers in the wonderful increase ci crops by sowing Crimson Clover, mailed free on request. iT. W. WOOD SOriS, ! k Ssedsmen, - Richmond, Va. i 'Write £cr Wood's Crop Sporlai, and ! prices of any Fisrir. Seeds required, j s 7 /7. /7/a V PIMPLES 3 ACHES ■ BOUT’ f CHILLS I ■ ■ CAREV~JCT.ES S PAINS ■ J / Aie xA.nger •—*-’-numan system’s method of giving warn* Mi t: v<. ; ■ l “ 3 become impoverished and circulation poor. Ml In this < human body is alnm«r powerless to resist the H more se.icus ihucss. Don’t delay. You need ■ DR. PIERCE’S I ■ Gc3?lb?n Bledical Discovery I MB ih ‘ ‘ c ‘- v ' “-v-u.ateiy at tne seat of your trouble— the Stomach. Ml it lenus a nelpir.g ,::xnKelps to digest the food. Tones up the stomach ■ M &oon brings bacr. 1 conditions. Food is properly assimilated and H Ml turned into nen, Uovd. Every organ is strengthened and every tissue Ml re-vitalised. -lade from roots taken from our great American forests. Try this remedy now. Sold by Medicine Dealers in liquid or tablet form—or send 50c Ml BB to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial box. ■ 99 Yon can have the co-i.jdete “Medical Adviser” of 1008 pages—doth boiu;d-iree-t>y sending Dr. Pierce 31c for wrapping and mailing Gasoline Egines, Wood Turning Outfits, Pump Jacks, Saw Mills, Shingle Mills, Power Cane Mills, Black and Galvanized Pipe, Brass Goods, and Fittings. Gainesville Inin Works. Member Chamber of Commerce, GAINESVILLE, GA. Oneway op I|MB Don’t Waste It. Cut out cheap roofing Neponset Paroid Roofing will save you money be cause it lasts longer and we can prove it. Also all lengths in Galvanized Roofing. PRUITT-BARRETT HDW. CO. Painesville & Northwestern Railroad U Arrive Gainesville. No. 1 9.15 a. m No. 3 4.15 p. m Leave Gainesville. No. 2 9.45 a. m No. 4 5.15 p.‘m Chronic Diseases Cured. AFTER THIRTY-FIVE YEARS of successful practice and study of Chronic Diseases, for the last seven years I have cured every case where patients have followed my in structions, in the following diseases- Cancer, Tumor, Ulcer, and Dropsy. If interested, send me description of your ailment, with SIO.OO, and I will send you one month’s treatment by return mail. Address — J. A. LATHEM, M, D., Oakwood, Ga. Some Cures: G. G. Bowman, ulcer sub-maxillary gland, Buford, Ga AV. F. Dover, cancer temple, Cumming, Ga. i .1. F. Jones, cancer cheek, Lula. Ga. R. M. Loggins, cancer forehead, Leaf. Ga. W. A. Jennings, ulcer of lip. Oakwood. Ga. Walter Reed, tumor of neck, Oakwood, Ga. O. W. Gilstrap, cancer of hand, Gainesville, Ga., R. 6. Mrs. John Gilstrap, cancer eye. Gainesville. Ga., R. 6. Worthy Martin, cancer tongue: and mother cancer face, Dougherty, Ga., Route 1. Sallie Graham, cancer head, Dougherty. Ga., Route 1. Mrs. Mary McKinney, Dropsy. WHO WILL HELP CARRY THE LOAD? Well, it looks line the whole nation is puzzled over the cotton sit uation. It is just talk, talk, talk by everybody. But. if everybody will help carry the 1 > . : ’! won’t hurt, any of us much. Did you ever try car rying a very heavy load a longdis tance, ami someone came along and said. “I'll help you?'’ Oh, how it does help and rest a fellow. Well, the farmer lias been carry ing a heavy load a long time, and now if he gets left on this cotton crop it will not only hurt the tanner but will hurt every enterprise of the nation. Can't the people right here in Hall county help one another carry the load and irnke it easy for all? It everybody will just leave out selfishness and work to one an other's interest —just work the Gold en Rule—we can tide over all right. If the bankerswill let their money out at a low rate of interest, ami the merchants will take a few bales of cotton on accounts, and everyone that has a little sparemoney will get in the move of “Buy-a-Bale-of-Cot ton,” and the guano people will do everything they can and all pull together, we can carry the burden a long time. We are glad of the move that Mr. B. H. Merck has on foot. How many will call in at his place and sign his contract? Ah, you that live sumptuously every day—won't you help? Did you ever go to the cotton field bare-foot on :» cold, frosty morn ing and have to pick cotton and sell it at four and five cents to buy shoes with? Os course, we know there are plenty of people that have never done this, and never gave it a thought. And they don’t know how to sympathize with one that has to do this. Ah. you that have plenty, won’t you let a few crumbs fall from your table? I have been told that the cotton mill men have sat down at 7 ami cents cotton. That doesn’t cor respond with 8 cents cotton checks. No crumbs falling from the cotton mill men’s tables. Lazarus will have t<» perish. “Whoso stoppeth his ears to the cry of the poor, he shall also cry, but shall not be heard.” Prov. 21:13. You landlords that are able to help carry the load —won’t you do it? Let your renter set his cotton under the shelter and give him a chance! Now. I will say right here that the writer is a renter, but he has enough old fodder to feed another year, and lias sold a hundred bushels of corn this year, ami has not gone in debt one tive-cent piece, and now has three thousand bundles of fodder under the shelter with nearly another thousand to pull: about eighteen acres in cotton this year—will cut down to ten another year—only work two mules: am fattening enough meat on old corn to de me another year; will sow lots of wheat and oats this fall —I have my own seed. If you want to stop buying high priced feed stuff another .year, sow oats, and commence just as soon as you can. If you are going to sow cotton land, pick your cotton over and sow about thre rows to the mid dle. If every renter will do his best to carry his own load it will not be long until lie can see where lie has profited by so doing. I heard that there was a renter in Jackson county who carried a oale of cotton to a large and well-known firm. They offered him 10 cents a pound, if lie would put every dollar of it on his account, but if he kept nack the rent they would not give him but H cents. No crumbs falling from their table. But on the other hand there was a man who owed an other man in Gainesville SSOO. He went up the other day to see about it. The man to whom the money was going told rhe fellow to rest easy —he need not pay the interest if iie didn't want to. I know both men. Some crumbs falling there. Every renter doesn't have a good landlord, and (‘Very landlord doesn’t have good renters. Well, when we run up against cases like that we can t tell what is best every time. But we do know that this is one time when we need to all work together. Will we do it? Don't sue a man if you can help it on reasonable terms. The lawyers will live soinu way. 1 never have heard of one perishing. So keep down lawsuits as much as possible, and let's all pull together, and the burden will be light. Oh, who will help carry the load? W. (4. Cooper. :s Old Sores, Other Remedies Won’t Cure. ■ worst cases, no matter of how longstanding. - cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. ier’s Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieves ' tin and Heals at the same time. 25c, 50c, SI.OO Land for Sale A tract of 85 acres, in Tadmore District. 7 z J o miles from Gainesville; good 4-room dwelling, good tenant house; good out-buildings; about HO acres in cultivation, balance in woodland and old fields, plenty run ning water; good pasture; on road leading to Commerce. For particu lars, write or see E. F. Collins, Gillsville, Ga., Route One.