Newspaper Page Text
OCTOBER 97, 1914.
THE T1MES-EHTERPB1SE
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION
Issued Every Tuesday and Friday
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED FltESS
Now that the Legislatures of South
Carolina aud Texas have tailed to
give the cotton situation any relief,
It Is, of course, useless for any other
law-making' bod it 3 to be convened.
We were satisfied all the time that
if Congress did uot relieve the sit
uation, that the several states would
j never get together, and that, there-
Entered at the Thomasvllle Post j nothing would be done. T iero
Office for Transmission Through the
Malts as Second Class Mall Matter.
Dally and Semi-Weekly Times- Enter
prise Published by the Tunes En
terprise Company, Thomasvfilo, Qa.
E. K. JEltGKR Editor
W. D. Il.Utait.lVE Uu». Mgr.
COTTON LEGISLATION.
Subscription Rates;
One Year
Six Mont is ■ •
.*1.00
was, however, a chance for some re
lief from the States, and It seems
to us that Governor Slaton showed
very jioor policy In letting It be
.he Many Sided Villa," Is the j known that he would make it Impos-
way the Athens Banner .alks of the slide for the Georgia Legislature to
Mexican rebel. Better have said the even consider the plan. The mler-
Crank-sided Villa. I vlewt he gave out doubtless express-
„ led the correct legal view but Mere
Wouldn’t It bo pitiful If girls did | was a splendid chance fur state- with
not really find so much moro to j different constitutional limitations
to rel'eve the situation within ‘heir
borders, and they shnulj' '.lavj un
derstood that. In case they ac'ed,
that the peop,e and Government of
Georgia would have done the'r ben
to acquiesce la the movement and
that n e would never have und ir-
taken to prosper at their expense.
The sound of the hammer sounds We arc sure that all of our states
men have not only done the best
they could, but doubtless as well a.
anybody could under the circum
stances, but the very fact that two
such statesmen as Governor Slaton
and Senator West should take sne i
opposite views as to whose business
It Is to help the farmers, convinces
their fellows than the rest of the
world could ever hope to.
The syrup market has opened up
in Cairo, and new ayrup and batter-
cakes these cool mornings make a
fellow glad he got up to breakfast.
mighty good If the hammer la made
of steel and It hits a nail in some
progressive fellow's business house
or residence.
Somebody in Thoinasvllle Is going
to pull a real fat plum, before many
months have passed, and It Isn’t any
of your business who he la, until It 118 that there mu8 ‘ be considerable
is officially announced.
doubt as to the constitutional Issues
Involved.
Syrup, peanuts and pecans are 1 There is some reason why the
three commodities whose usage can ! leaders In Europe should differ so
be largely extended and they can all j materially as to who Is responsible
be raised at a small cost In this 1 tor the war. but we can see no rea-
section of Georgia. j son wb 7 men In the same section,
0 .Interested In the name thing, and
The European war was played In ; belonging to the same party, should
miniature Saturday afternoon, when ] have ao little tolerance of the views
the local and the Camilla schools |°f others and 00 so Insistent about
tried to see who could gain most I their own.
ground. I "'0 are sure of one thing, ta.ii if
-■ o lit would be proper and beneficial to-
The Philadelphia Suffragettes, who 1 the State of Georgia to enact some
offered one hundred thousand dol-: appropriate legislation, affecting ^he
lars for tho Kaiser’s head, If they; cotton situation, It la very bad to
did do so, have been requested to ; have to tell the people that the Con-
put the money in wool blankets for I stltutlon la In tho way.
the French soldiers. There has never been ns much rea-
a son for iici.swiiuns In Slate cor.stl-
_ I tutions as In Federal constitutions,
1 and too strict an observance of such
| limitations will create a demand for
i the repeal of all such hinderances
I to progressive government.
The Supreme Court of the I'nlte i
; States brought on tne Civil War by
The Belgians are unwilling to give , taking a narrow view of an ancient
up the rest ot the country, now Instrument, and t.ie construction
that the Germans have gotten every , j 11 *’ 1 ! l ’° v, ’ n ln the Dred Scott Fie la
thing of Importance. Those chaps * on shows that it Is dangerous to
evidently don't know that they are have men in high places who prefer
beat, or they have an unusual aptl-! 1° ho dislodged by violence and au-
tude for a fight. jarchy, rather than to take Into em
ir lalderatlon In construing old law. the
The fellow who wants to tell hl«: a< lvance an <i progress of the times,
troubles to the world, through 'he When one generation undertakes to
newspaper, usually Is peeved it he is . tell succeeding generations what
caller. upon for ten cents to jay for j they may and what they may not
having his poorly written copy tran- j do, it expects them to show some de
scribed so that it can be easily read j cretloa, nnd if such were not 'he
by the printer.
The U. 3. Navy needs eighteen;
thousand additional men. Now, j
young fellow, there’s your chance
to get good discipline and an educa
tional trip around the world at lit- I
tie expense.
tie protecting when the cost will
Nil mostly upon the foreigner?
Many Irregular things have been
done in times past with much less
reason.
All this talk about paternalism
and government Interference of pri
vate lntatlve Is inapplicable under
present conditions. There la no
constitutional question Involved, If
the farmers of both stat and
federal constitutions had expected
our people to be powerless in time
of an unexpected crisis, they would
not have provided that our, legisla
tive bodies should exercise other
authority than that enumerated
when the general welfare demand
ed.
No Constitution was ever Intend
ed to make a government Impotent
when its people were suffering and
we fall to see how there could ever
be a dangerous precedent ln pro
tecting our citizens whoever t’.iev
may be from an unnecessary sacri
fice of their property to foreigners.
All of these technical arguments
against pulling our own ox ont of
the ditch remind us over and over
again that a "litle learning la a
dangerous thing."
HOME THOUGHTS O.V CURRENT
LOCAL EVENTS.
The Folr-
Tbe folks in Thomas County arn
looking forward to the annual fair
with unusual pleasure. They nro
not one whit deterred from pleas-
u ruble expectation In view of the so
called “lean year," but, on the con
trary, they believe that Thomas
sill show up fine nt this particular
time. There will be a splendid agri
cultural display, some good stock,
the best poultry show ever had In
this section, cotton display, baloo.i
ascension, races and many other at
traction. that will prove Interesting.
In addition to all this, there will be
a National Pecan Growors Conven
tion here at tie same time.
The Reran Trees—
It Is more than fortunate that the
pecan trees of this section are, as a
rule filled with nuts at this time,
because of the coming -pecan con
dition. The world-famed Parker
grove is not bearing, as It usually
does, but many trees, ln scatters 1
sections, especially of the Mobile
n.’loty, are loaded down with fine
nuts. The pecan men are going to
see the best section In the world for
tills culture and one of the best an I
most hospitable towns in it. It will
truly be n splendid opportunity for
pecan men In this section of the
country and one that they should
by all means take advantage of.
The papers will be from the best
posted men ln ths country, and those
who have spent years ln studying the
cultivation and marketing of peran
nuts.
Brooks county Is seeking Belgian j would fall
refugees and naturally invltas the j When one thinks of the mass of
counties in and around about ln' Legislation resulting from the Intir-
(ieoi gia to print the spell in. refer- j state Commerce Clause in the Fed-
ence thereto. Some advertisers, ! eral Constitution, and the many
those folks in Brooks, and they man- 1 &nd varied expansions of tho Four-
age to get most of It without pay teenth Amendment, generally for
to the newspapers, too. j the protection of vested Interests, It
0 I Is difficult not to lose patience with
THE A\ ERAGE GEORGIA FAR- ^ On r friends who "strain at a gnat"
protecting our-
Tlie Court Week—
As la customary, some fow of the
citizens are discussing the actions of
the Grand Jury, during the past
week. That body of men have shown
case, tie whole theory of a written; by thelr acts that they wore fu „ y
Constitution, difficult to amend, j aware of theIr duty and tia;
they worked In a business-like and
ACER.
Gets up at the alarm of a Con
necticut clock.
Buttons bis Chicago suspenders
to Detroit overalls.
Washes his face with Cincinnati
soap ln a Pennsylvania pan.
Sits down to n Grand Rapldi ta
ble.
Eats Chicago meat, and Indiana
hominy fried ln Kansas lard on a
St. Louis stove.
Puts a New York bridle on a
Kentucky mule fed with Iowa corn.
Ploughs a farm covered by an
Ohio mortgage, with a Chattanooga
plow.
When bedtime comes, he reads a
chapter from s Bible printed In Bos
ton.
Crawls under a blanket made ln
New Jersey, only to be kept awake
by a Georgia dog—the only home
irodnet on his place.
And then wonders why he cannot
make money raising cotton!—Ex
change.
when it cornea to
selves.
“A LITTLE LEARNING."
If the German Government was
confrontod with a proposition
whereby several hundred millions of
Its peoples' property was about to
be sacrificed to foreigners, does any
one doubt that It would act at
once?
Our cotton crop will bring several
hundred million dollars less money
from Europe than It would If the
U. S. Senate had been put upon tie
amendment recently defeated ln the
statute books, will not the whole
nation feel the loss? Is not self
preservation the flret law of natio
ns It Is among individuals?
Haven't we all these years been
interfering with the laws of politi
cal economy and of exchange ln our
tariff system when It was a case of
taxing a part of our country for
intelligent manner to ferret out and
get at the bottom of various matters
which should have had their atten
tion. The body did not act ln n
radical, fruitless manner, but wen:
at the work in hand ln a very
straightforward and conscientious
way. It proved one of the most
commendable grand Juries of the
past few years. These gentlemen
are all to be congratulated for their
effort In behalf ot law and order In
the community.
THE SOUTH FACES A SERIOUS
PROBLEM.
General depression in the South,
due to the low price of cotton la
bound to have a beneficial effect. It
Is also liable to cause hardship and
entail suffering during the coming
farming year, but that la one of the
economic conditions which nobody
could foretell, or prepare for . It
has come suddenly and unexpected
ly and the South mast make the
best of It, without outside assistance
of any material amount.
The leason Is plain. This condi
tion, from some other cause, fa lia
ble to arise at any ttme. It por
tends a most calamatous period of
the South'd history, unless cotton <s
The luxuries are not being purchae
| ed now, the dealers ln luxuries are
feeling heavily the depressing effort
ot business conditions. But next
year, this will be ns naught to *-ie
great suffering that will bo exper
ienced by farmers and business men
of this country, If we persist ln rais
ing too much cotton.
Every energy, every thought, every
act of the South today should he
with the desire to forestall panic
and distress next year. The sureat
way Is for the farmer to raise his
own food nnd enough to sell In his
home section and save the freights
and profits from Western farms
Tie South la literally scattering lo
the birds an actual farming profit
of twenty millions of dollars each
year to Western farmers, for corn,
oats, hay anil meat. It Is, at the
same time, planting Its soil ln cot
ton for which there la now no mar
ket nnd tie prospects of which are
distressingly poor.
A change mist come nnd Immed-
iatley or the South Is not going to
be able to pay for what It needs, and
It sown land will be white with a
product that we cannot exchange for
actual necessities of life, except at
an exhorbltnnt and ruinous price.
What we must do, la to raise enough
for our own people. What we do
with the rest, is Immaterial.
RETURNED CONFEDERATE AND
HIS RESOLVE.
Columbus Enqulrer-3un.
In a recent Issue of tie Confeder
ate Veteran, a publication ln the
Interest of the soldiers of Dixie, ap-
that stay.
A hostile army halted here, In line
ot battle formed.
Deep.. trenches dug from hill IS
hi|l around;
With plck'and spade, on every tide,
•the blue-clad soldiers swarm
ed,
And with unsightly ditches scarred
the ground.
The mules and hon.es, cowa and
swine, yard poultry, ducks
and geese,
Even to tho last domestic beast
and bird.
Had quickly "connacated” been (to
hasten on the peace;
Longing for which each vandal
bosom stirred!)
A tangled scrub now fills the road
that twined around the hill.
Among the mosey rocks 411 black
and gray;
The creek bed’s dry as ashes, far
above the Idle mill—
Some ditch has turned the stream
another way.
The broom sedge whistles In the wind
that blows across the hill
Where once spread out the fields
of waving groin;
The sassafras Is growing thick along
the old fence rows,
Between which used to run toe
dusty lane.
'Mid desolation such aa this, I must
the future face.
Unschooled, untrained, from youth
to manhood grown,
With poverty to handicap me in the
strenuous race
Of life I must henceforth contest
alone.
But thouuh 'twoiiM seem I'm "down
and out," with nothing bright
to cheer.
The battle spirit’s strong within
me still,
And now ln civic fields of strife, I’ll
enter without fear
That I shall fall to triumph, by
Ood'3 will.
Thomasvl'.le nnd Camilla schools
engaged in a very Interesting game
of football on the local lot Satur
day and tho result was a tie, neither
team being ablr to cross their oppo
nents’ goal posts. The game started
off with an advantage ln favor ot
Thomasvllle, Duncan making a twen
ty-yard run around end. -After
drilling np and down the field, Ca
milla was forced to kick and the
hall -was blocked by Thomasvllle, but
a Camilla mnn tell on It.
, „ _ _ .iuuuuu ami .wu-vau o-u w.™ The second quarter was fiercely
peared a poem written by Rev. Dr.. contested, Camilla making tho first
Robert H. Harris, D. D„ of this city, miles, by actual count. The
Germans have gained a little less
The Allies are some ground-galn-
9. The sum total of tne gains ln
the past two weeks total nine hun
dred and -thlryt-elght thousand, six
bunded anil forty-two and three
■ ■ i- ^
er vous IsTomen *
Are troubled with the "blues”—anxiety—sleeplessness—and warnings of pain
and distress are sent by the nerves like flying messengers throughout body and
limbi. Such feeling may or may not be accompanied by backache or
headache or bearing down. The local disorders and Inflammation, If there
b any, should be treated with Dr. Pierce’s Lotion Tablets. Then the
nervous system and the entire womanly make-up feels the tonic fttect of
. DR. PIERCE’S
Favorite Prescription
Take this In liquid or tablet form and b« a well womanl
Mrs. Eva Tyler of So. Geneva St. Ithaca, N.Y„s*ys,“I have been in a run-down con
dition for several year*. Suffered from nervousness and a great deal of pain at certain
Dr. Ptoroe’s Pleasant Pellets
regulate stomach, Uvor, bowels
FIVE GERMAN
AIRSHIPS DESTROYED
London, Oct. 26.—The Paris cor
respondent cf The Dally Express,
says that five German aeroplanes
were destroyed Saturday by the
French soldiers. Two machines were
brought down at Rhelms, two by
the Meharlcourt forts, and the fifth
was wrecked near Callas.
A FIGHT TO A TIE
Football Game Here Saturday After*
noon One of tlio Very
Best of Season.
substantial gain of twenty yards ot
forward pass, perfectly executed.
The second attpmpt was a failure,
and Wright, of the local team, fell
who la chaplain general of the Geor-1
..... ... „ _ ,, .than twenty thousand miles, and It
ila division of the U. C. V. The
. . is presumed that both thoroughly |on tie ball. Thomasvllle then tried
many friends of Dr. Harris, not only . .. Id ja forward pass and gained twenty-
In Columbus, but throughout Geor . e nJ°y«d their trip around t e or d. j flve yards ^ a Iaiter attempt, the
. . ... I — ~m—— ilocals got fifteen yards and were
•Sla and the aonlh, will read twenty yards from the goal posts
poem with much interest and plena Ty Cobb and George Stallings are when time was called.
ure. The poem, title and all as It n0 w the undisputed champions of 1 Xo So,,r ’ e ln T,llr<1 Quarter.
_ . . _ I The third quarter developed no
appeared In th» Confederate Vet- Georgia popnlars. Theodore Roose-j 9COre aU h 0 ugh there were some
cran, follows; volt and Hoke Smith will have to 1 mighty struggles on both sides, the
A Returned Confederate Veteran an t take a hack seat, when the baseball j]j®j d b ® ad g both 1 sWes* 16 rerertlng” 1 ^
Ills Resolve. 1
(By Rev. Robert H. Harris, D. D.,
Columbus, Oa„ chaplain general
dopes cornea oat.
punting. One of the Camilla prey-
era was pennllzed ln this quarter for
slugging and another for off-side
. , , ,! play. The end runs attempted by 1 was adjudged best waltzors on the
When you meet one of those liot, the ]ocala wara fo . losse and tbe fl 00 r that evening.
Georgia division, U. C. V.)
Thd old plantation's gone to rack,
,, ,b f, ren 1 c ® 8 air artists that can’t be stopped any [enemy could not successfully mantpu-
My chll.ioods home defaced 1u ... . „ late any startling plays that meant
other way, the only thing to do IB
ARGUMENTS BEGUN
IN FRANK CASE
Lawyers For Defense Making Plea on
Ground That Defendant Was Not
In Court When Verdict
AVns Announced.
Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 26.—Argument
on the motion to set aside jjge ver
dict finding Leo M. Frank guilty ot
murdering Mary Phagan, here last
year, began before the Supreme
Court today.
This motion Is based on the
ground that the defendant was not
present in the court room, when the
verdict was brought in.
Much Interest In Today's Hearing.
Atlanta. Oct. 26.—Argument be
gan ln the Supreme Court today on
the motion to rot aside the verdict
of guilty ln the Leo Frank case on
the ground that he was not present
when the verdict was rendered.
The lawyerj cn both sides pro
duced voluminous evidence and for
mer decisions and precedents to es-
tabllsh their cases, and the court
will not hand down a decision for
several weeks, probably.
Madame Tomple, a clairvoyant, ot
Mexico, has written a ‘‘spirit letter"
to Judge Ben Hill, of the Superior
Court, sayln.- she had been in spir
itual communication with Mary
Phagan, the murdered girl, and that
Mary said Jim Conley, and not Frank
was guilty.
However, the scoress referred U
Mary as “Mrs Phagan,” betraying a
slight Inaccuracy among her spir
itual friends. The letter went into
the "freak flic.”
Prize for Beat Wultzer.
The cotton ball, which is to be
riven by the Ladles Aid Society of
the Hebrew congregation, Thursday
evening is going to be an Interesting
event nnd many tickets have already
been sold. The committee, today
announced that a beautiful prize
would be given to the couple which
every wav.
The negro houses empty ( ® v ® r * raise your windshield and shoot the
‘‘freedman ’ moved to town),
And mother and the girls are all gas to It.
Home Raised Foods Bulwark of
Europe-South’s Present Crying Need
Pres. Andrew M. Soule, Georgia State College of Agriculture
first down.
In t.ie fourth, n real thriller de
veloped, Lamb the diminutive end
of the locals, breaking through the
line and getting a Thomasvllle punt.
and running forty yards before be- e,u« .ewouan... nor ringing m thread;- f^
ing downed. The ball was Riven to 1 It the nret time you need Ouinlne for *ny pur-
Camilla where it was caught, and p i KBmiJNKU < htowft?L5!i?*ffV ™
some discussion was had with the ^ *• bt°«a la bom,. &c
referee over the piny on the rules'
governing that point. The locals —*
took the ball to within fifteen yards i
of the goal as a cleverly mnnlpu.
How To Give Ouinlne To Children,
FBBRIZ.nfBlithttride.nark rum* given to an
Improved Qninlne. It la a Taetelcte Gyrup, pleat,
•nt to take end does not dJeturb the stomach.
Children take It and never know It It Quinine.
Also especially adapted to adults who cannot
take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate t
cqure nervousness u
the other? Why cannot we do a lit- abandoned and food products raised.
To n Georgian visiting Europe, that
which stands out paramount In agri
culture, la the absolutely complete util
ization of land in producing food sup
plies, not one, nor a few kinds of
food for each farm, but as complete
a circle of food requirements ns It la
possible to raise.
What Is the result tn tlmea of war?
There la a food supply at home.
What would happen In the South
should an enemy cut its lines of com
munication with food supplies ?
Where would an enemy first attack
and Invade this country If not the
South, where food supplies might be
cut off?
What has actually happened In the
South with war thousands of miles
away? The cotton market largely de
stroyed; prices of cotton ruinous; the
South with paralyzed purchasing pow
er; food prices soaring; buying power
falling; to buy food a necessity. Cer
tainly a gloomy predicament, yet one
from which It la extricating Itself
with far less of calamity than might
be expected, chiefly because of the
sympathetic assistance of the more
fortunate people of the South and of
the nation aa a whole.
What la the’ lesson to be learned
from this terrific blow? Certainly not
dependence upon charity, magnificent ^TLTSsS iTJt* I
as that has been, but rather tho les-1 The ba „ was t -, cn , ogt t „ Cam | 1Ia !
son of self-respecting independence i an( j a jj chance of scoring was over, j
which can be obtained only by follow* ■ Much Pep In Game,
ing the example of Europe in creating ] Both teams played the game with
home supplies as far as possible, for j possible vim and neither side
every need and every emergency; to | a Pl , arently had the advantage. The
. onA 1oou . * n j playing of Duncan and Lamb fea-
nnrt j tur ®d for the locals, while the Whole
give consideration first to food and to, show Qf t;je c < am |n a aggre gatlon was
n ^„ a J terWard3 ’ I ■, : Captain H. Bullard, whom the lo-
Wlth every agency In Its power, the, caIs cIa|m , rlnger belng a co ,_
lege boy now staying ln Camilla for
Collegb of Agriculture la trying to co
operate with, demonstrate, teach and
preach to farmers the diversification
of crops. It Is busy with farm demon
stration agents, boys’ corn clubs, girls’
canning clubs, pig clubs, poultry
clubs, farmers' Institutes, extension
schools, field agents working In anl-
mal husbandry, ln poultry and ln ce
real crops; with exhibitions at fairs,
bulletins, correspondence and in every
other wny possible, ln teaching, urg
ing and helping the farmers of Geor
gla to get Into other lines ot agri
culture than merely growing cotton.
Those who want practical lnforma-
short time. That, of course, 13
Immaterial and tils playing made the
game close and Interesting.
Wimberly refereed the game splen
didly and those who know football
complimented him highly on the fast
snappy manner ln which he con
trolled the ,,lny. There were about
two hundred present, and unusual
local enthusiasm was manifested.
The llne-np of tho two teamB was
as followB;
Pruning Grapes
And Scuppernongs
T. H. McHatton, Professor of Horti
culture, Georgia State College ot Ag
riculture.
Most planta can be pruned at any
season of the year. Grapes and
scuppernongs, however, will succumb
if pruned during the growing season.
The grape vine la so porous that
when pruned during the growing sea
son the sap Is pumped out of the
vine and, aa we commonly say, “The
plant bleeds to death."
The grapes and scuppernong, bear
fruit on last year’s shoots, ao If al
lowed to grow and bear as they will,
the fruit wood gets farther and far
ther away from the main plant each
year and has a tendency to overbear.
The fruit does not seem to be as well
nourished aa when closer to the
source of food supply. For this rea
son the general principle ln pruning
grapes should be to cut back the
canes that grow this year, leaving
only from 2 to 6 buds. These buds
will produce a like number of shoots
that will bear fruit next season. A
grape vine that has as many as 20
tearing shoots should produce a
heavy crop of fruit.
It has been generally supposed
that scuppornong vines will not bear
pruning, but tbls Is not so. They
should be treated similarly to ordi
nary grape vines, only they should
bo allowed to retain more bearing
shoots.
It Is well to prune grapes before
Christmas, though the ordinary grape
vines could be pruned as late as Jan
uary. Scuppernongs must be pruned
before Christmas, otherwise they will
bleed seriously. Should It happen
that a scuppernong vine becomes
broken or Injured and begins to bleed
badly. It can be stopped by burning
the end ot the bleeding vine with a
hot Iron, or by putting grafting wax
over the wound. Scuppernong vines
pruned previous to Christmas do not
bleed.
Camilla.
Position.
T. H. S.
G. Bullard
.Center.
. . . Dixon
West
R. 0. . .
. . .Wright
Palmer
• L. O. . .
. McIntosh
Bennett....
.R. T. .
. . Breen
Rackley....
. L. T. .
. . Scott
iBuah
. ,n. e. .
. A. Lamb
W. Bullard..
. . L. E. . .
. F. Lamb.
Perry
..q. n. .
. . Hndlev
McElvey....
. R. H. .
. . Duncan
Falrclot'.i. ..
• L. e. . .
. . Flowers
H. Bullard,
..F. B....
.. .Quinn,
Captain
Captain
Carts Old Sons
Other RiiMdi
is Won’t Core.
PLOWING VER8U8 DISCING LAND
FOR OATS
John R. Fain, Professor of Agronomy,
Georgia State College of Agriculture.
For tho past two years comparisons
hare been made In yields obtained
from land disced and similar land
plowed In growing oats. Tbs crops
for both years showed larger yields
where land was disced.
Discing la both the most economi
cal and rapid method of getting ln fall
crop after stalks of com hare been
cut and shocked.
are cured by the wonderful, old rellabte Dr.
Porter's Antiseptic Healing oil. It relieves
Pain and Heals at the same time. 23c, SOc, f ICO
adr.
Ffnlght Paid ni 30 Dm Free Trial
(•■•a *o aaa iPrtrwaaa jaaj rati oaa.y
•DwoT Psjf Exorbitant Ar/oaa
'rSMfi
owners. Oct the reliable l
ard mwins machine end mi
$BBJM DOMESTICi&Oai/SI
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Domestlo Sewing Machine Co..
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HOMER WILLIAMS
'i^TERLAL FOR'THEHOUSE'
BUILDERS.
Get Our Prices Before You Buy.
Phone 4S5-L.
OFFICE ON A. C. L. WEST CLAY ST.