Newspaper Page Text
E.
fl| EIGHTEEN LBS,
\Vretcbed
Takings
[fell Off Ui
\lmost a
ietoo-
* -
Until
Health
Tanlac
til She
Living
kite
d S een me before 1
L Tanlac you would
it was the same per-
t0 you now,” said
E. Hamilton one of
it known residents of
Ala., m telling of the
lh l e results she had od-
ffrom the use of Tanlac
Mae that is accomphsh-
d, wonderful results in
think of it!” continued
liiton. ‘‘I have S alned
, pounds since I began
the medicine and have
jen two bottles.
1 from a nerveous
j 0 wn and for nineteen
have been in wretched
I had no appetite and
ide I did eat did more
ia n good and my sleep
>ry poor. I was so weak
Jr so miserable that it
[sometimes take me from
sst until suppertime to
house work finished for I
have to stop every few
and rest. I too played-
[keep on the go. I took
Ids of treatment, but noth-
me any good and I just
letting worse all the time.
ied like I was losing
every day and I lost
until I was almost a
ikeleton.
husband begged me to
ic, and just to please
| bought a bottle. I have
ished up my second bottle.
11 you I wouldn’t take
idred dollars for the good
I done me. It strengthen-
| up right from the state,
.. a good appetite and
ling I eat agrees with me
ly and I sleep fine. As I
lready said, I have gained
n pounds and I believe I
happiest woman in town
relieve I have a right to
imply feel fine in every
. friends are asking me
I have been doing to my-
look so much better and
Irse I tell me that Tanlac
. msible. I believe it is
st medicine ever sold over
J store counter,
t sir, you are perfecly
ned to use my statement
papers and am only too
) be able to let the people
|"'hat this wonderful medi-
IM do for the sick. I be-
anyone in the shape I
i» will find entire relief
Tanlac.”
is sold in Bainbridge
ively by Willis Drug Co.,
toalsonville by the Palace
w. Climax by the Climax
wey; Iron City, by Strick-
’Cordell; Brinson, by H.
Te ll Supply Co; Babcock,
Babcock Bros. Lumber
b" Eldorendo, Ga.,J. L.
break packages for
ha uts and cater es-
% to them. Lowest
. a * e prices on! all
er ' es > Provisions and
“ ce - Ralph R Belcher
e kSale Grocer.
tlo rt LODGE rto. s
A. M.
^ts Every First and
E^hursday Nights
01 town Brethren Especial*
Jy Invited.
1 flELDsj y"
W. H.
BERKY,
Secy.
E PRINT BETTER
REPRESENTS I TOWN
In Changing From Ready
Print the Argus-Enter
prise o f Thorntown,
Ind., Expects to Serve
the Community Better.
In announcing the change
from ready print to all home
print the Argus-Enterprise of
Thornton, Ind., says:
‘‘With this number we come
with home print. There is just
as much space as ever for local
news and interest. We have un
loaded the ready print and will
increase the number of pages as
demand requires. The rise in
the cost of paper, objectionable
advertising and outside manage
ment were objectionable fea
tures.
‘‘We want to make our paper
more and more local, not only to
record the current news of our
day, but also to continue to col
lect and publish the pioneer his
tory of Indiana and especially
the interesting facts between the
red and the white man in the 100
square miles that constitute the
Indian reserve that exists here
for a decade from 1818 to 1828
which constitutes the pivot upon
which the fate of the red man
turned east of the Mississippi.
We expect to keep the record of
our birds, which will make ma
terial for a bird book if there is
a boy or girl among our readers
that has the spirit of Aububon
to become an ornithologist. We
ask the continued co-operation
of our friends and of those who
heretofore have not been our
readers to help us to make an
ideal home paper.
“The Argus-Enterprise ought
to represent Thorntown better
all printed at home than a paper
three-fourths of which is printed
in Indianapolis and one-fourth
here. ”—Exchange.
FAIR EXCHANGE
A New Back for an Old One—How
a Bainbridge Resident Made a
Bad Back Strong.
The back aches at times with
a dull indescribable feeling, mak
ing you weary and restless;
piercing pains shoot across the
region of the kidneys, and again
the loins are so lame that to
stoop is agony. No use to rub
or apply a plaster to the back if
the kidneys are weak. You
cannot reach the cause. Follow
the example ot this Bainbridge
citizen.
Mrs. A. B. Cliett, 627 Calhoun
Street, Bainbridge, says: ‘‘My
kidneys were weak and I had
trouble with the kidney secret
ions. I noticed dropsical swell
ings in my feet and my back
sore and lame. I kept getting
worse all the time. Doan’s Kid
ney Pills, procured at the Ehr
lich Drug Co., gave me great
benefit and I have never had
near so much trouble since.”
Price 50c at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy
—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the
same that Mrs. Cliett had.
Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buf
falo, N. Y.
Dixon’s “Fall of a Nation”
here October 27th.
HOW WE LIVE EVERY DAY
To Uncle Jim Williams: How’d
that crow taste, ennyhow?—
Buckhannan Tribune.
I Tasted allright, bub; we never
gloat in victory or wear a grouch
in defeat. We live every day so
that we can look any man in the
face and tell him to go to hell.—
Greensboro Herald-Joumal.
j But you don’t always tell them
do you until you see their size?
Satisfy!—that’s a new thing
for a cigarette to do
It’s nothing for a cigarette to just taste good—lots of
cigarettes may do that. But Chesterfields do more—they
satisfy! Just like a thick, juicy steak satisfies when
you’re hungry.
Yet, with all that, Chesterfields are MILD !
No other cigarette can give you this new enjoyment
(satisfy, vet mild), for the good reason that no cigarette
maker can copy the Chesterfield blend—an entirely new
combination of tobaccos and the most important develop
ment in cigarette blending in 20 years.
Or.
“Give me a package of those cigarettes that SATISFY”!
With the exception of one
little incident at the county fair
in which one party endeavored
to make a jackass of himself,
the rest of the affair was un
usually fine. The fair managers
should have tied a blue ribbon
around the neck of that parti
cular party and exhibited him
with the other braying animals.
—Richland News.
Bet four dollars that he was
a delinquent subscriber or one
ot those ginks that borrows his
neighbors paper and reads it. If
not that he was one of those
bucks that kick on every public
movement because of taxation
and never paid a nickle to the
tax collector in bis life. Come
on Brown and tell us thebal-
ence of the tale. Don’t we give
his pedigree.
A fellow from Bainbridge Op
ened up a stand a few weeks
ago to sell an immitation beer—a
fluid article put up in regular
beer bottles that looked like it,
smelt like it, and, they say,
tasted like it—but it was minus
the "kick,” and thereof is the
undisputed reason that may be
assigned for the lack of sufficient
patronage to prevent his depart
ure to other fields. Certainly
the fellow expected to stay with
us a while, for he invested in
six months’ stand rent, fitting
up a town license and healthy
stock. For his information and
the opinion he may have formed
it may not be out of place to say
that the meaning thirst is here
alright, but it needs to be nour
ished with the “kick” rather
than with the tickled palate to
make things lively enough
around a business stand to give
a fellow thoughts of starting a
Federal Reserve Bank. — Cal
houn County Courier.
What’s the matter Roy? Did
you try it? Seeing is believing.
Illinois doesn’t require the wo
man voter to tell her age. Illi
nois knows the power of a State
is limited.—Macon telegraph.
But it is not fair to hit a man
in the face with a wet towel in
any such manner.
Subscribe for the Big Paper, The Post-Search
Light and get all the county news.
A Magnificent Line
of Dry Goods
The highest class Dress Goods have been placed
on our shelves for you to see and realize just how
much money you can save by buying right now.
Aline of
BlacK Cat Hosiery
that the children all know and cry for. An of
fer in Ladies Dresses that will make any lady
interested because she can see the value in item
at once.
Our Line oLSHoes
are worth your inspection. The cool weather
joins us in suggesting that you look over our
underwear and save money by getting what you
need now. Children’s Coat, Novelties and all
kinds of Crockeryware and Glassware.
Pay us a visit and save your hard
earned money.
t, J. Belcher Co.
Bainbridge, .... Georgia.