The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, February 13, 1923, Image 4

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PAGE POUR tjw-am 1 THE BANNER-HERMjff!^ Jflf ATHENS, GA. Published Every Evening During the Week Except Saturday and < Sunday Morning by The Athena Publishing Company, Athena, Ga, EARL B. BRASWELL Publisher and General Manager CHARLES E. MARTIN Managing Editor Entered at the Athens Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879. Member of the Audit Bureau. } | [DAILY SERMONETTB In your patience possess ye your souls.—Luke 21:19. To know how to wait is the great secret of succesa.-rDc MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub- Jication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are also reserved. Andrew C. Erwin, President. Bowdre Phinizy, Secretary and Treasurer. H. J. Rowe, Vice President. Address all Business Communications direct to the Athens Publish ing Company, not to individuals. News articles intended for publica tion should be addressed to The Banner-Herald. THE BEAVERS TRIAL Atlanta is a great city. It was made so by the forward look ing, fair minded, energetic men and women who reside there. Every patriotic citizen of Georgia, whether at home or abroad, points with pride to the capital city of Georgia, the metropolis of the South. Its achievements reflect credit upon the entire state. James L. Beavers is the chief of police of the city. His active enforcement of the laws has made for him a number of bitter enemies. At the same time his Splendid character and fearless discharge of his duties have given the man a high raVik in the estimation of the people of the south from which no group of poli ticians can demote him. Now, after a life time of service, comes his reward! A passing group of officials in charge temporarily of the affairs of the city drag him up for trial before a jury whose ver dict can apparently be written now. The laws give to a criminal even the right to demand that an indictment state specifically the crime with which he is charged. A careful reading of the indictment against Beavers re veals no one ground upon which his demotion or removal from the force can- be fairly based. The people outside of Atlanta arc not concerned about Beav ers, the man. But they are vitally concerned about Beavers, the official. His conviction would have a most depressing effect upon law enforcing officials throughout the state. It is to be hoped that the non-factional people of At lanta will demand a fair deal for the official on trial. Atlanta owes this to the rest of the state. DON’T PLANT TOO MUCH COTTON Commissioner B. Harris, of the South Carolina state depart ment of agriculture, commerce and industries issues a note of warning against planting too great an acreage of cotton in that state. According to Mr. Harris, it may be argued that there is . no danger of a surplus of cottcn so long as the boll weevils’ rav ages remain unchecked. Rut they should remember that it has been demonstrated in oilier states and also in South Carolina, that cotton can be grown In sections when the weevil is present. “The farmers must take care to raise a crop that is not too , large to be sold at a profit. Suppose, for example, the South’s crop in the year just closed had been a normal crop, what price would cotton be bringing now ? I venture to say that, it would be trouhd eight cents. ; •; .J "We are told that tho world i3 facing a shortage of row cot- t ton material. But, in many, instances, the statisticians who tell us that are considering that -our foreign markets are able to con sume as much cotton now as they did before the war. Does any- ono believe that Germany can buy from the Southern farmer the same quantity of cotton now that she could and did before the lall of 19147 The idea i/, of course, preposterous. Then, why • should we raise cotton for Germany?” Commissioner Harris urges greater diversification of crops at of immediate economic importance^ and he contends that farm ing can be made more attractive to| the young people of the South if growing all cotton is replaced in pnrt by the production of other necessaries of life. He is opposed to the suggestion of colonizing farmers on unused Southern land. He expressed the hope that the native stock of the South would eventually turn back to the farm, declaring that the growing movement to the cities is an alarming symptom that should be considered seriously by the leaders oflnction ol the counrty. We have the purest Anglo-Saxon stock in the'world in the South and it should not bo Berton Braley’s Daily Poem its upTo you (By BERTON BRALEY) Jim was Just a little weak and Just a little wild. • Jack was steadygoInK us a clock. Jim Went to the City, wiiere liie the blazing lights beguiled, Jack stayed home and went to 1 ' raising stock; , Ife worked and planned with clar ity und won to great pros it* rlty And lie’s u solid citizen) 6-day; A pattern of propriety, of w.sdoin and sobrioiy. An admirable sorb in every way. Jim was not successful in the city’s stress and strife, He couldn't keep his money or his job, He made a mess of business and of morals and of life. He's Just a sort of wastrel In the mob;. Weak, reckless arid importunato. he's but one more unfortun- uSe Who couldn't stand the gaff— came to harm, And honte folks whs referred to him said, “All that has occurred to him Is Just because he went and left the farm!" They blame tho wicked city f r -tie ruining of Jim— But I cannot somehow view It In that light. For if Jack hod sought th? city—It would have ruined h m. And ...unk he would have pros pered there, all right! And if Jim had never blown nway I think he would have thrown away His chances for acquiring honest pelf, The place upon the map you arc won't chenge the kind cf chap you are, Your destiny depends upon your self! DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU? ▲ Little of Everything And Not Much of Anything. By HUGH ROWE THAT—. The action of the young men of the University of Geoigia in agreeing to put the ban on “poli tics” in that institution is highly commendable and proves beyond perndventure the loyalty and love they have for their Alma Mater. Politics have proven , detrimental in marly ways to the activities organizations in college ,m. r now that a harmonious agreement' has been reached with all concern ed a better spirit and feeling will bodj mucl exist among the student which is bound to Tesuit in good. THAT— Advertising pays in civic and church affairs as well as In com mercial lines. Here are a few quaint notices which were posted in n church out west: MISSING—Last Sunday, some families from church. STOLEN—Several hours from the Lord’s day, by a number of people of different ages dressed in their Sunday clothes. STRAYED—Half a score of lambs, believed to have gone in Hit 1 direction of “No Sunday Ichool.” big gala occasion. > THAT— Many people seek employment in various lines of industries whether they are fitted for spec ial occupations are not. It i3 said that more people seek employment with the railroads than in any oth er line and, it may be true for o’- ten the man who is determined to regardless of the work mikes good in railroad, agricul tural, merchandising or banking lines. Here is one told of a man who desired to become a railroad man.. It is from the Buffalo Courier: Ole Olesoii wanted to be a rail road; man. So he got a job in n roundhouse us engine wiper. His foreman had been trained in the “Jim’’ Hill school; he allowed no waste. He everlastingly kept ding- donging at Ole like this: “Don't waste a drop of oil/Ole; 7-11 cdst money. And don’t waste (he waste, either;' it’s getting Inighty expensive.” Ole finally got these economy facts pounded into his head. One day Ole was promoted to fireman. The day before he went on his first regular run MISLAID—A quantity of silver freight engine he was posted as to d copper coins on the counter of his'duties through a scries of questions. This was the last ques tion: “Now, Ole, suppose you arc on your engine; you go around a curve and see rushing toward you on a single track the fastest pas senger train. What would you do 7 ” Ole replied: “I grab the dam oil can; I grab the dam waste— and I yump.” THAT— Just as a reminder and some thing to be thinking of, did it ever occur to you that the water-tower on the city hall lot should be mmrnw THE HILL MIXTURE nnd copper a public house, the owner being in a state cf great excitement. WANTED—Several young peo ple. When last soon were walking in pairs up Sabbath Breakers’ Lane, which leads to the City of No Good. LOST—A lad, carefully reared, not long from home, and for u time promising. Supposed to have gone witli one or two older com- panions to Prodigal Town, Husk Lane. Any person assisting in the re covery of the above shall in wise lose his reward. THAT— The opening of the white way will be an occasion long remem bored in this city. The committee in charge of the celebration making elaborate plans and it is expected that several thousand visitors will 3pend the day and vening here. A programme is be ing arranged to make a day and night cf it and every moment will be interesting and worth while. Every citizen should be proud of the white way and join with the committee in helping trf make the day and night of unusu al intcrost. and attractiveness. The specific date and a complete pro gram will be announced shortly nnd then with concerted action, let' us all enter into the spirit of the occasion, whole heartedly and fer a (By T. LARRY GANNT) I daily receive Inquiries from farmers about the Hill Mixture. It eeems that our cotton-growers have been so fooled by worthless boll weevil remedies that they are chary nbcut trying anything new. Of course this Is a most important matter, and Just all this imrticular time, when poison must be had for the boll weevil, If we hope to raise a crop of cotton this year. I don’t think I can devote my col umn to a more Important subject than to give our farmers all avail able information on thla matter. I yesterday was sent copies of two letters that I think will satis fy any Intelligent man ns to whether not the Hill Mixture Is a fraud. One letter is from Mr. W. VY. Drlskell, of Hpartfl, Oa„ dated February 2nd, written to his friend Mr. Frank Palmer of Waynesboro, j Ga. Mr. Drlskell writes that the belief is current in his section that liurrett & Co., are behind the Hill Mix.uie merely for the purpose of mpking a "killing" financially, Mr. DriskeTl says, “You are certainly In a position to know the merits of this product Du you think the mixture really and actually tracts 4>e weevil? I am trying to encourage our people to take heart and -rome buck” again with King Cotton, and wish to make my con fidenc? in the mixture as strong as posible." _ Here Is a synopsis of Mr. Pal mer's reply: "The good people have been gulled and taken In on many so- called bell weevil remedies that' we must be patient with such un believers. We have had the game experience In Burke county. Last year some of our best and most ___ Intelligent farmers scoffed at and moved? The city owns a lot on ridiculed Hill's Mixture. But Pulaski street which was purchas ed many years ago for the pur pose of moving the tower to that place, hut for various reasons and conditions no definite action ha.', ever been taken. However, tie time has arrived when such a movement would meet with the approval of the tax payers and the small cost involved would not create any serious opposition to any action on the part of the imycr and council shu nd they n 1 home its.removal. With the. elim ination 1 of the tower from the lot there would be ample space for a city auditorium which would mean much in providing for conventions and large gatherings of the pub lic. It is worth while to agitate anil maybe such agitation will bring the improvement. JUDGE GEORGE SAMUELS OAKLAND, Cal—The poniton tiary for the “vamp,” the “shick,” the illicit “affinity” is the cure Superior Judge George Samuels’ of this city, advocates for home wrecking. If the divorce mill s grist is to be lessened, then violation of the sancity of family life must be nude a felony, the judge argues. He Is author of the first anti- vumping law on record—to be in troduced at the current session of the California Legislature. “Home breaking tigurcs on the statute books,” suys . Judg: aiEiKmiwni ran 8EVEN TIPS ON HOW TO GET AHEAO By Elln O’Byrno DeWItt . New York’e Thriftiest Woman Don’t ask for charity. Then you'll never nnd out how cold the oriel Is. ' CHICAGO — A story of methods employed by private detective pgenclos Investigating radical movements, strikes, and labor troubles contained In a deposition made hero by Albert Ballon, alias Blanow, former agent of the Dc- > Only 88 Americans' and Canadians died last yeap, out cf every 10,000 of the total population. It was the lowest death rate of any year on record except 1921, The figures are furnished -by Louis I. Dublin, statistics expert of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Had It not been for an outbreak of flu, 'the death rate in 1922. would have been lower than the year before. Rockefel ler's scientists, fortunately, have made the first real step toward the conquest of flu, by isolating the (form. If this leads to a preventive, as it probably will, a still lower death 1 rate lies ahead. The ldbr death rate is good news. Even the people who wail most about the miseries of life do not seem anxious to leave. Don’t gossip Ipartment.of Justice .Monday night Do something useful evefy mjn- land Tuesday brought forth spccl- uto. If there's nothing elso to do ,0c and general denials from one can always sew. Until my agencies and persons Involved in . _ hoys went Into long trousers lithe alleged exposure, hamuels, "as a major crime; liamel ma( | 0 every bit of their clothing. ! Frank P. Walsh, who Is defend- wrecking only os a minor offense.I piso good English. It gives peo- ling the alleged 22 communists WHICH IS i p|e a better Impression of you I facing trial at St. Joseph, Mich.. I taught myself good English by!j February 26, and who Is here tak- listenlng to other*' *pcech. i"*S U>a deposition, said the docu- Read hooks that deal with thrift jnicnt would be used In connection and with successful men nnd wo-[with the defense of tho men. , af my life has stolen what I qua- mon- T hey put backbone Into! Halanow charged that he and uot replace. V on. sentimental novels take it other agents for private detective “So in my measure I ask a five- i awa y agencies planted In the ranks of years’ penitentiary term for love save. But savo judiciously. I radical bodies, made possible the WORSE? “Yet which is the'works?. “Ho who steals my purse ntca!.i trash, but he who steals love ou P Everything that happens has a meaning. You arc reminded of this when you study news items. Like these; Stylemakers, at their national convention in Chicago, announce that grandma’s old shawl will return to fashion this spring. Life is a revolving wheel, humanity travels in a circle, everything repeats. Another item, from Lubbock, Texas, says Sheriff Bud Johnson will arrest p»pplo Who play dominoes on Sunday. The west, once wild and woolly, now is tamer than the cast. Tobacco makers report that Ameri can production of cigarets last year was 546 millions more than in 1921. That looks had fCr the ration’s nerves, for the clgaiet u nervous man’s smoke. these unbelievers have /quit their ridicule, having bald a .very dear price for their obstinacy. BUrke county practically as a unit en dorses Hid s Mixture and those who scolded at this poison last year are only !*>o willing to use it now that its results have been so plainly demonstrated. REGARDING THE HILL. MIXTURE. "Now as regards the question of the Hill's Mixture naving an in gredient In lta composition that! at tracts the boll weevil, I wish to say that I unqualifiedly believe It ha* Else how could It poison the weev- tips is m aw IV BE A SUCCESS BY HENRY A. DIX Who Ha* Turned Over $l,000,000-a-Yeir Business to His Employes Because 1 have turned over to our employes Oar posperous and profitable business, some peo ple, in'fact ftcarly everybody, seem to «d|Ms acffcn radical To usttis neither radical nor an experiment, hat the natural outcome ana .climax of a policy ' pursued during many years. We have been, “feeling” our way. toward* this step for a Ion" timt and In many ways ana we have-found from actual experience that the policy paid. It paid in,the loyaty and inter est and cooperative spirit of our group of workers. It paid in the good will and esteem often ex pressed by buyers nnd mer chants. It paid in creating a spirit, without which no busi ness can be truthfully called successful. We found that the more we -gave, the shorter hours we adopted the more liberal nur general policy became—the richer we gTew. We found that the workers were highly ap preciative, not alone of the var ious innovations and actual deeds, but also appreciative of our attitude toward them. No business can succeed with out a good organization and yet—in place of a hearty coop eration between employers and employes—there is generally antagonism and strife; in place of a co-partnership there is enmity; in-place of team work and utility there is division of interest and of aim. 52ARAM □ UTR SALAD DRESSING j z-i Delicious -Mayonnaise Taimadge Bros. & Co. Distributors To clean out your bowels with, out cramping or overacting, i a i, Cascarets. Sick headache, bilious, ness, gsses, indigestion, sour, up. set stomach, and all such di-lrcss gone by morning. Nicest physic on earth for grown-ups and chil dren. 10c a box. Taste like can- dy.—(Advertisement.) BY BOB DORMAN NE WYORK—Henry A. Dix, 78-year-old enlightened employer, who cut his own salary from $45,- 000 to 50 cents and turned over his $l,000,000-a-year business to his employes, hopes that other em ployers will follow his lead. sacrifice entailed the pas sing up of his son’s birthright to the prospering dress'manufactory. But Mark Dix, 42, was willing. Happiness,’’ he says, "is not what you have, but what you do.” So father and son worked out all the details of the transfer of the business which was 30 years in developing. Now it is In the hands of their several hundred em- ’• /nlovtf The census shows America has over three and * Jutlf million, widows.' You’d have lost money money if you had been betting on the total without knowing It. How many of those widows and their children were left amply provided for when the man qf the house passed on? Most husbands and fathers do a fairly good jjob, at providing for their families, on this side of the grave. Few pf them carry enough insurance, probably because death seems far off Until a few hours or days before the last heart-best. Our so-called flappers (a word now almost obsolete) are the ; i product of the dry climate of America. So claims Mrs. Beatrice ' Forues-Robortson, English writer and actress, arrived In New York on a lecture tour. She thinks our dry, stimulating climate keeps us keyed up too highly. Didn't we have the same sort of climate when grandma was a quiet and demure young lady? How ever, Mrs. Forbes-Robcrtson’s idea will be gladly accepted by many, especially the ones who are always seeking an alibi out side themselves. • Fifty thousand bottles of Chinese wine, seized in New York City by Mohibltion raiders, are taken out to sea and sunk. This Chinese wtqe, known as Ng Ka Pi or yellow bark brandy, is dls- from wormwood. It is a first cousin of absinthe and about times as powerful as the strongest whisky. Cellij- cheAlsti' plunderers. “I have beqp on the bench for SC years. I presume I have handled 1000 cases in which home trage dies have figured. Every other judge has handled 1,000 more. Tins should be stopped. “Even if my law fails to pass, I believe that national discussion of the subject will be of wide spread benefit. And 10,000 club a good Idea, flghj for It. I had an Idea the world wanted an Irish music store hut I had to light every step of the way: Be kind. It pays. BY Josephine Van de Grift NEW YORK — Ellon O'Byrne loved an Irish tune. r„ m ^.-‘ hr0 i , u Kh0Ut Califo r nia are l That love and a little bundle of demanding the measure s pa3- i 00 thes was thatsbel aetaoln m sage. ' REMEMBER l'HE CHILD “In deal.*,? with the broken home queition wo aro apt to for get the children. Sometime) men and women can mend their livea, but when father cr mother is stol en, the child is robbed of his chance for. proper guardianship and protection. In his young mind wrong ideas are implanted' con cerning the marriage'relation. He hears his mother upbraid his father, or the father denounce his mother. And one day he learns what that father or mother did. It, later, he overcomes this early im pression, it is nothing short of miraculous.” THE INJUNCTION REMEDY Superior Judge Hurley, of Chi cago has applied the injunction to love piracy. In three divorce cases he isiucd orders restraining the corespondent fiom further rela tions with the litigant, against whom a decree was sought. In each case the result was a reconciliation and dismissal of proceedings. A Puzzle A Day clothes was all that she had when an Immlgrrlrirlrrlrtllrcmfwp s b b an Immigration girl of 19, she land cd in this country. Today Ellon O'Byrne DeWItt owns property valued at }200.000. She lis3 started four of her broth ers and Blr'.-rs. brought over from the old country on tho way to ma terial success, and has put her two sons through school and establleh cd them In business. i Now York's thriftiest woman they call her down on Third sve. where the handsome gray-bqlred woman presides over the dostintes' of what is now a thriving music store. Twelve yearn ago Mrs. DeWItt. after having weathered somewhat more than tho usual number of life's storms, found herself strand cd with $100 in her pocket and g young and hungry son dinging to 4 each hand. Then nlle remembered the tunes Spend tho same way. Don’t try famous raid of radicals In 1910 to get rich quick but If you've got “ d “ ned «! elr fo,Io r, er * ‘?* e ‘* er - —■ .j— that the raiders would nnd them. Bv his own admissions, Balanow marked himself a double crasser nnd a paid Informer, working for tbrpe employers at the same time and selling out one to tbe other. He said he was formerly In the military Intelligence service, an operative of the Burns Interna tional detective agency,. Thiel, Daniel and other private agencies, and a member of the communist •■arty, tho socialist laborite. young people’s socialist league and the workers international Industrial union. , , Attorney Walsh was expected to continue taking the deposition for two or three days and then O, L. Spilth, assistant attorney Gen eral of Michigan,’ and W. L. Gore, prosecuting attorney for Berlnen county,-Mich., were to cross exam Inc Balanow. Officials of the Barns and Thiel agencies Here Monday night tpsde a general and specific denial of Balanow’s charges. ARRESTED IN RAID| AUGUSTA. Qa.—Tom G’odhan. •(ore proprietor Is behind tbe bars Tuesday because of the failure of a Jug to break a*ter ho had dashed It against the walL Federal offi cers carried Ooodhan .and the Jug which they said was filed with ployes, who will pay for their stock out of the profits of the com pany. CO-WORKERS. NOT EMPLOYES “The things that we have dono for. our workers,” explains the younger Dix, “the five-day week, the bonuses, sick benefits steady work, vacations with pay, no over time, recreation centers—all have been sops to ease our own don- sciences. “We felt that they did not ap proach justice to our co-workers. ’The success of any business is not only duo to the acumen shown by its heads, but to the loyalty and devotion of its employes. “Real justice demanded that they be regarded as co-workers, not as employes in the proprietory sense. “As for myself, I am ready to take a job with the new concern. My dad will act in an advisory ca pacity. “But first we hope to preach the gospel of fairness to all employ ers. “They will find that it pays to be just. “At the end-of the year, it is the usual; thing for 1 the business man to fill out a two-page sheet—on nc side are assets, on tho other liabilities. , BETTERING CONDITIONS If the record shows a large vol- e of. business and a correspond ingly greater volume of profits, the board of directors, or the in dividual owner, la well satisfied. “But suppose that at the same time a third sheet were placed be fore them—a sheet devoted to a record of what the firm had done towards the betterment and prog ress of its workers. “In how many firms would that sheet be a Malik ? “But if such sheet were to be come as customary at the assets 'nd liabilities record, employers would soon see that it woild be blank. “That la what we want to preach.” • WHAT EMPLOYES 8AY Elizabeth Blumenthsl — It’s simply wonderfuL I can harly realize that I have become a cap- i ItaUsL .. Nelli* ^Brennan—Sure, it’* Wendell’s Pills, Ambition Brand, For Run-Dovn, Tired Out People. If you feel tired out, out of sorts, despondent, mentally or physically depressed, get s 60 cent box of Wendell’s Pills Ambition Brand, at Palmer A Son today and take the brat big step toward feeling better right away. If you work tou hard, smoke too much or are nervous, Wendell's Pills, Ambition Brand, will make money back from Palmer A Roe on the flrst box purchased. As a treatment for sffectlonsot the nervous eyetem, constipation, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, or Nervous Indigestion, get a box ol Wendell's PUla, Ambition Brand you feel better In three day. o< today on the money beck plan. — advertisement. HEALS SOUR 01 FI MS. MS Chew g Few Pleasant Tablets Indigestion Gone! alio bail loved back home. She cora iiqupr. to tho lockup. Tho took her hundred dollars and start cd an Irish mnsic store. All day long she kept the store. At night she would get her boys' nupper, help them with their les sons nnd cut them to bed. Then she would mend their clothes, straighten her house and do tho family washing. In the morning she would hing out tho washing. iraid was sihgcd >\te Monday. II thoroughly? Tho weevil seeks the poison; the poison does n»t sink the weevil. The poison Is not put on the weevil; the weevil absolutely must and does seek It. There Is no room tor argument I have under ray observation and application of thla poison 1 killed thousands and thousands of (hem. liy the use of thlu poison hist year I ubolutcly killed every hibernat ing weevil that! came ;n my cotton and so did everyone else who used the Hill Mixture. It Is Jherefore preposterous and ridiculous to deny that the weevil does not seek the pojon, "The Idea the Barrott A Company of Augusta, Ga., are drying to foist a swindle upon their best friends, patrons and Georgia citizens well as the entire cotton growing belt. Is ridiculously unjust. They .'.re entitled Vo tho greatest ad- m-'ratloni and praise for their heroic effort to revive the Industry of cotton growing, on - which their business Is dependent, and lb place within the reach-of the average cotton farmer a practical, simple and positive remedy to combat tbe boll weevil. It has taken) many hundreds of thousands of doliadt, procured and endorsed by Barrett A-Company jte put across this Im mense Idea. They are doing a ser vice in exploiting the Hill Mixture that will result In hundreds of mil lions of dollars saved to the South era farmer- The very lack of ma terial will prevent tpem from do ing such a volume of business as would ovtrorme their tremendous overhead expense. There Is un questionably no possibility of pro fit for some time to same from the sale of Hill Mixture. Barrett A Company are the largest cotton factors east of thd Mississippi riv er. and you can imagine what in roads have been made upon their once gigantic business by the boll weevil.” One thing that gave me faith In the H-!U Mixture was <tie handling of this preparation by Barrett A Company- Their name carries with it confidence and Implicit trust. I have known this family- for a naif century, when I came as a lad lt> Augusta. A finer or more honorable name doe* not exist In Georgia or the South. They hare faith in this mixture or they would not touch or endorse 1L Those who know the high char |‘ ' and constipation; Chamberlain'• acte> of this firm need no other | £*•*• * e “P*®**-* froni tl» Salve, needed in every family for endorsement a. to tbe vatu, of It. “jmMn toe 2 wot kb Florence France—It’a just like having your dreams come true. Maybe I now can do some of the tiling) that I ha/-. u,waya want?)!. Instant stomach relief! Harm less! The mpment “Pape's Di>- pepsin” reaches the stomach all distress from acid stomach or in digestion ends. Immediate relief from flatulence, gases, heartburn, palpltaiton, fullness of stomach pressure. Correct your digestion for a tow cents. Millions keep it handy. Druggists recommend it.—(Ad vertisement) A GOOD THING—DON'T MISS IT Senr yujr name and address plainly written together with 5 cents (and this slip) to Chamber- lain Medicine Go., Dee Moines, Iowa, and receive in return a trial wckage containing Chamberlain') i lough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup, brouchial, “flue” and whooping coughs, and tickling throat; Chamberlain’s Stomach and Ltvsr Tablets for stomach troubles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd the heart biliousness NEGROES RETURNING 80UTH. I yesterday meS a gentleman who had just' returned from a trip over South Georgia, and who also took in other parts of our state and side trips into South Carolina. He tells me that he finds everywhere more hopeful oullook and they are going to make a fairly good cotton crop this year, nnd a bumper food crop. They can grow cotton in South Georgia without poison for ( ouutii UCVIMI15 wiuiuui |JVWUU SVI by keeping the plows going they bo a thing of tbe past In Ohio. they wished, pay for talking ma chines with Liberty bonds. Some time later Mrs. DeWItt purchased a home on Staten Island putting cook breakfast and get the boys {up 94000 la Liberty bonds as col- off fo school. At 9 o’clock she lateral. Now she owns two other would be-down to her aio'rekeon- 'houses on Staten Island and live tag. • n.:. „ - ■ JToU. »:•- property nett to IL too. 'DeWltfc^"My motto? Balog During the war site . 1st it baling and doing somoth'tis useful known that customers might, If every knock off the weevil and the hot sand kills the pe*L But on our red clay land we cannot do this. In South Georgia farmer* are turn ing their attention t|> hogs and cattle, and packing houses are springing up everywhere. Car- loads of hogs are also shipped away. — i employers for money to .did, burns, scalds, wounds, piles and skin affections; these valued fami ly medicines for only 5 cents. Don’t miss •*—Advertisement. HOW TO KEEP WELL ALL WINTER T iHIS it the time when you hear people tay, •‘There’s lots of sick ness this winter.” . It's not the fault of the weather, winter should be the healthiest time of the year. But you should malie sure your blood is rich and pure., and your oomt back, They say when they get back-homo they Intend to stay there. Home write that they are starved nearly to death. They are told about the hirb wages paid In ilie North, but found after paying expenses.they oould not make as much as. they do here. Labor ogenus tell them mat they can !•’ from 89 cents to tl an hour, but they are - only , paid for 15 to 2* cents per. hour, with promise that after they stay with «he firm awhile their pay will be raised ti prill help keep you 25 or SO cents per hour. They sey will enrich your blood and tone they are also about froze to deatk " *— and CamMI stand tOie climate. are prepM&lg to; hoi#’! and are lining up t) * i’s cluh* and civic Ohio will probablv defeat censorship In the aamo lm- entirc system in perfect condition. Gude* Pepto-Mangan. taken will help keep you well all winter. It win enrichyour blood and tone up your entire system. Your druggist has U—Uquid or tablets, as you prefer. Gude’s UC5LB5 lLIJ«J|gUI|) iU lift' POIIIt! I.'U-I —, . g pressive manner as Massachusetts' lOTllCana,