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Par* Tw*
THE ATHENS DAILY HEBALDo
WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 21/191*’«.
BUSTERS ALL OVER
Itched and Burned, Clothing Irri
tated. Face Badly Disfigured.
Used One Cake Cuticura Soap
and One Box Ointment. Before
Finished Trouble Was Gone.
Route 6, Huntingdon, Tenn.—“At threa
months old my baby broke out with blister*
»11 over his body. They would form soroe
which we could not cure. They looked like
bum blisters and they itched and burned so
that it was almost Impossible for him to
sleep at night. “Whenever ho scratched
them they would make a bad sore and bis
clothing irritated them so that he kept mo
awake a greater part of the night. Hlsfaco
was badly disfigured.
“I got different kinds of salves but they
didn't do him any good. Then f noticed
an advertisement of Cuticura Soap and
Ointment so sent for a sample. They helped
him so much that 1 bought a cake of Cuti
cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment.
1 would bathe him good in Cuticura Soap
and apply the Cuticura Ointment twice
daily and before I had finished them tho
sores had entirely disappeared and tho
troublo was gone." (Signed) Mrs. Myra B.
Nesbitt, Oct. 8. 1914.
Sample Each Free by Mall
With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad
dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Bos
ton.” Sold throughout tho world.
BEAUTIFY THE FARM
PROFESSIONAL.
W. VINCENT ARNOLD.
Suggeeto-Therapist.
675 North Jackson St., Athens, Ga.
Treatment without drugs or surgery.
Testimonials from satisfied patients
for fourteen years furnished on appli.
cation. Phone 80.
wood, mow AWPSTtrt.
WHY THE
ATHENS HIDE CO.
ARE
“GOOD WEIGHT KINGS” •
Hides Weigh More and They
Pay More at
786 East Broad Street
SPECIAL ATTENTION
GIVEN
To the examination of the eyes
of summer school students.
J.L. PENDLEY
206, 207 end 208 Southern Mutual
Bldg., Athens, Ga.
9
All Straw Hats
$1.25
10 Per Cent Off on
All Furnishings.
LEVY’S
Papular Price Haberdasher.
||
f xxtnen
■ * THE CORRECT. WRITING PAPER
The children at the present day will
if raw up to recognize Crane’s "Papers
;K as the social standard of those who
' demand the best, as did their mothers,
grandmothers, and great grandmoth
-jare before them. . r$
J, Complete stocks in all tha various
•.sizes and tints continually an exhibi-
if
TO ITS VALUE
Atlanta, Ga,, July 21.—“Beautify
the farm with flowers, trees and
fruits and shrubs, and you will fdd
more value to it per. acre than you
can do in any other way.” .
Charles S. Barrett, president ot
the National Farmers’ Union, after
having traveled nearly a million
miles within the United States and
crossed the Rocky Mountain thirty-
eight times, makes this assertion as
the result of observation and study
of farm land values in every state in
the country.
While seeing and urging the utili
tarian viewpoint, Mr. Barrett does
not overlook the sentimental side of
it—the pleasure that beauty gives to
the family and the satisfaction that
comes from the cultivation of high
ideals. But he shows the farmer
wherein he can increase abundantly
the value of his own property by
those little attentions to detail in
making his surroundings more at
tractive.
Georgia, he declares, possesses ad*
vantages of soil, climate and water
over southern California, and yet the
latter state has Built land values’ to
$500 and $1,000 and. oven more per
acre, simply by malting them beau,
tiful to the eye.
INCREASE. FARM VALUES.
“We can double the value of near
ly every farm in Georgia in two of
three years,” Mr. Barrett asserted,
“by making it beautiful; States
which do not begin to have the ad
vantages o fsoil, climate and water
that we possess, have increased their
land values to often as much as ten
times those of Georgia, and they
have done it simply by making them
attractive, by creating something
that somebody else wants. We can
do the same thing here, even better
than others have done it.
“Of course I am not unmindful of
the other important things which ths
southern farmer must keep in mind,
auch as crop diversification and the
growing of home supplies. These are
not only important but imperative to
successful agriculture. But the farm
and the rural home can be made
beautiful and attractive without in
the least ignoring these essentials.
BEAUTY AT $1,000 AN ACRE.
“Recently 1 took an automobile
trip through Paradise Valley, Cali
fornia. It is purely a rural territory,
a country of farms. But it is beau
tiful, one of the most beautiful rural
Positive Relief
For Constipation
The progress of modem medi
cal science is, perhaps, no more
forcefully evident than in the sim
plifying of many of the old time
remedies of past generations. For
instance, the • harsh cathartics
and violent purgatives used
by our forefathers to relieve con
stipation are now known to be not
only unnecessary but really harm
ful. Constipation can be more
effectively relieved without the
discomfort and pain these oM-time
remedies occasion. 1
A combination of simple laxa
tive herbs with pepsin, sold in
drug Stores under the name of Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is most
effective, yet mild and pleasant It
is absolutely free from opiates
and narcotics and equally as desir
able a remedy for the tiniest babe
us for rugged manhood. A free
trial bottle can be obtained by
writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 462
Washington St., Montlcello, Ills.
sections In the world. It U^ l?!L 0 M»«*•*» WWBfc-to#
ful because the people have made’ if l>lac» IW moke
so tflAtree* and shrubs doubled-In value inafW years.
because buildings am painted, yards
are clean, and all unsightly things
have been removed.
'“What is- the, land worthf/ I
asked. ‘It averages $1,000 an ad] "
my conductor replied, ‘but there
seldom any for sale.’ He infoi
me that it just so happened that t
was a small tract on the market thsp
to be sold for the purpose of’divid
ing an estate. It was held at $1,000,
After my -return I received a letter
Informing me that, as, a special con
cession, this tract might be had at
$950 an acre.
"Think of It—land which will -pro
duce no more than that right here in
Georgia, bringing around $1,000 an
acre, and difficult to get at that
price! Why? Their climate in many
respects does not compare with ours
and with scant rains they must spend
fortunes in bringing water to their
crops. Why, then do their lands
command tnese prices? It la because
they have put both beauty and fer
tility into them. They have taken
the dry and arid plains, and brought
water to them at they are compelled
to do at vast expense, and havo con
verted them Into perennial garden of
fruits and flowera. They hare made
of them something many people want,
and when you turn out something
somebody wants and wants badly, he
is willing to pay the price for it.
GEORGIA CAN DO IT, TOO.
“Many other instances of valuable
farm lands in the west might be cited,
but the foregoing will illustrate my
point. We have better and more pro
ductive lands right here in Georgia,
than those of California. We have a
more equable and satisfactory cli
mate. Why, in southern .California
it gets and stays as hot as blazes,
and no relief from it, except the
nights which are almost coty. The
climate variations are too great. We
have just the rainfall we need, good
water everywhere and in abundance
and we can do here In Georgia at
less expenditure of effort and .money,
just what they have done and more
in beautifying and making attractive
our farms and rural homes.
“With me this Is a matter of
knowledge for, in a limited way, I
have already dons it myaelf. 1 have
never lived anywhere but that I made
it a point to get trees and flowers all
around me, use plenty of paint and
keep things clean and attractive. The
land of my former home place in
Upson county sold originally for
$1.26 an acre; it was then accounted
poor land and no one seemed to think
much of it. I cleaned it up, planted
flowers and trees in advantageous
places, set out fruit trees, and built
up the soil. The expense was com
paratively small, and today I can get
practically my own price for It, but
I do not care to sell it.
"I am doing the same thing on a
South Georgia farm recently pur
chased, and with an expenditure of
UP TO GEORGIA FARMERS,
v?Any Georgia farmer can .do the
am# thing, do just what thay have
pne in Paradise Valley, - adding not
hly to his own enjoyment atid that
( f-! his friends and family, |ut. in-
roWealng the value of his iSoperty
two or three-fold ina comparatively
; “It is a delight to live among, beau-i
tiful surroundings. There is nd.more
forceful aource of character building
and strengthening. And it is a
source of comfortable satisfaction to
know that the value of your property
has doubled by your own simple ef
forts.
“This la a work tha farinera of
Georgia, of the south, cannot begin
too quickly. Keep the house end the
barn and silo painted; it preserves as
well as beautifies. Do away with un
sightly and unnecessary fences;
where fences are necessary keep
them uniform and whitewashed. Dig
up the weeds. Plant' grass, where
grass should be planted, but -keep it
away from where it does not belong.
Plant flowers around the house and
take care of them—flowera thft will
bloom from season to season.’ fat
out tree* and shrubs where they will
look best. Plant fruit trees and
take care of them—spray and nour
ish them,
BIG RETURN'ON INVESTMENT,
“These are simple things; they
don’t take much time and they don’t
Cost much,, and there- is a blggsr re
turn from -the investment than from
anything else I know of. It means
money in the farmer’s pocket, and
an added pleasure in country life
that nothing else in the world will
bring. It will make our farms every
where look prosperous. It will bring
people to us. It will create a de
mand for Georgia farm lands such as
has never existed before. ,Jt will
make us a greater and more prosper
ous state. -
“Beautify, beautify everywhere. A
reward quick and substantial, and
satisfying, await# us, if we will only
do it.”
COMB SAGE TEA
INTO GRAY HAIR
Darkens Beautifully and Restore# Ita
Thickness and Lustre at
Once.
Common garden sage brewed into
a heavy tea, with sulphur and alco
hol added, will turn gray, streaked
and faded hair beautifully dark and
luxuriant; remove every bit of dan
druff, stop- itching and falling hair.
Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur
recipe at home, though, is trouble
some. An easier way is to get the
ready-to-use tonic, coating about 60
cents a large bottle, at drug stores,
known as “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur
Compound," thus avoiding a lot of
mus*.
While wlapy, gray, faded hair is
not sinful, we all desire to retain our
youthful appearance and attractive
ness. By darkening your hair with
Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur, no one
can tell, because it does it so natu
rally, so evenly. You just dampen a
sponge or loft brush with it and
draw this through your hair, taking
one small strand at a time; by morn
ing all gray hairs have disappeared.
After another application or two
your hair becomes beautifully dark,
glossy, soft and luxuriant and you
appear years younger.
Why can’t President Wilson com
pel every Mexican he feeds to sign
an agreement not to fight any more?
One might almost assume that Mr.
Kipling baa recanted and recognised
the female of the species an less dead
ly than the Germain.
TO TYBEE
“Where Ocean Breezes Blow”
Thursday. July 22nd, 1915
Trip
$6.00
Tickets on sale for 4:15 p. m. (Central Time)
train July 22nd, final limit July 28th. For in
formation, berth reservations, etc., telephone
B. R. Bloodworth, Commercial Agent, Phone
640, J. C. Hellner, Agent, Phone 16.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA BY.
THE RIGHT WAY.
PHONE up: “Send me The Herald.” 4 0. nett,
I €h IO Today’s News Today. Pay the I UC boy,
NO.
A GROWING LIST
Of satisfied policy-holders is the best
evidence of service and efficiency.
We write Fire, Plate-Glass, Burglary
and Liability Insurance. Our policies
cost no more.
WE WILL BOND YOU.
ERWIN& COMPANY
Smith Building
. phoap Three-four-fiva.
College Avenue
m
i.
THE McGREGOR
COMPANY
i 'g *'
^Fine Stationery Department
MUTUAI
FULNESS
A Bank and its patrons are mutually helpful and
cooperation ia advantageous to all concerned. Your
K nal business interests yiould be bettered by a
connection. We believe this ^ank can se^ye
you advantageously.
QEORQIA NATIONAL BANK
Athens, Ga.
Jno. J. Wilkins, President ,W. P. Brooks, Cashier.
Chas. H. Phinizy, Vice-Pres. J. C. Chandler, Asst Cashier.
T. C. Dunlap, Vice-Pres. Eston Eppes, Asst. Cashier.
May
The water
- NOW using
DOSS Not
mum snttiiwna
for a few months and
notice the difference
Phones 95 and 504
Also Agents for
BOWDEN LITHIA
REORRIA RAILROAD
SPECIAL EXCURSION
YOUR CHANCE TO SPEND A WEEK AT THE
SEASHORE.
TO
Wrightsville Beach, N. C.
OR
Isle of Palms, S. C.
h *•»>*** 1S
TICKETS will be good going on any regular train
j.'.t, MONDAY, JULY 26,1915,;,
and-will be good returning on any regular-train on
’/: or before August 1st, 198k ,
First class coaches and through peepers.
If you desire sleeping car reservations commu
nicate with Ticket Agebt at .onee^*'-
R. e. CAMPBELL, - . . J. P. BILLUPS,
General Agent, , General Passenger Agent,
Athens, Ga. Atlanta, Ga.
FREE
To each purchaser of a Davenport
during this special club plan sale we
give one of these $2.00 Guaranteed
Pare Aluminum Coffee Percolators.
Read announcement below.
Guaranteed Pore Aluminum
' Guaranteed Pure Aluminum
Club Plan Davenport Sale
In order to make room for incoming stocks we offer our entire stock of Con
vertible Davenports on the most liberal terms we have ever offered.
Delivers any Davenport In
stock to your home.
Weekly is all you need pay
on Deferred Payments.
Hil
$i
REGULAR PHICESMmLaBKED IN PUlir FIGURES-NO^ INTEREST.
SALE BEGINS JULY 20TH AND ENDS
■ ** -i; JULY 31ST. .
Dorsey Furniture Co.
A MODERN FURNITURE HOUSE.
NB