About The Fayetteville news. (Fayetteville, Ga.) 18??-???? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1920)
FAYETTEVILLE NEWS, FAYETTEVILLE, GEORGIA. Weak and Miserable? Docs the least exertion tire you out? Feel "blue" and worried and have daily backache, lameness, headache, dizziness, and kidney irregular’ties? Sick kidneys are often to blame for this unhappy state. You must act quickly to prevent more serious trouble. Use Doan's Kid ney Pills, the remedy recommended everywhere by grateful users. Ask your neighbor! A Florida Case Mrs. S. L. Rich ardson, So. 3rd St., Chlpley, Fla., says: ‘‘I began to suffer with my kidneys and I •was in a miser able condition. I suffered from backache and could hardly at tend to my house work. I always felt run down and depressed. My kidneys were weak and didn’t act properly. I began taking Doan's Kidney Pills, and they entirely cured me.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S "iSSST FOSTER-MI LB URN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y. HOW DOCTORS TREAT COLDS AND THE FLU L First Step in Treatment Is a Brisk Purgative With Calotabs, the Purified and Refined Calomel Tablets that a:e Nausea- less, Safe and Sure, Doctors have found by experience that no medicine for colds and influ enza can be depended upon for full ef fectiveness until the liver is made thor oughly active. That is why the first stop in the treatment is the now, nausoa- less colorael tablets called Calotabs, which are free from the sickening and weakening effects of the old style calo mel. Doctors also point out the faet that an active liver may go a long way towards preventing influenza and is one of the most important factors in en abling tlio patient to successfully with stand an attack and ward off pneu monia. One Calotab on the tongue at bed time with a swallow of wator—that’s alL No salts, no nausea nor the slight est interference with your eating, pleas ure or work. Next morning your cold has vanished, your liver is active, your system is purified, and you are feeling fine, with a hearty appetite for break fast. Druggists sell Calotabs only in original sealod packages, (price thirty- five cents. Your money will be cheer fully refunded if you do not find them delightful.—(Adv.) CAllltACK PLANTS, LEADING VARIE TIES, GOO 10; 1,000, }2. Prompt ablpm’t. Clark Plnnt Co.. Box 108. Thomaavllle. Go. Doused, at It Were. No mun can carry water on both shoulders and make much headway. He gets cold water thrown on him from all angles and acquires the ap pearance of a drowned rat. MOTHER! •■California Syrup of Figs” Child’s Best Laxative Accept "California” Syrup of Figs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child Is having the best nnd most harm less physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love Its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say "California.”—Adv. Summer Love. “Beautiful girl, 1 love you." “But you barely know me.” “Perhaps that Is why I love you.” BOCHEE’S SYRUP A Harmless Soothing, Healing Remedy for Coughs and Colds. Here Is a remedy for coughs, colds, bronchitis, throat irritation, and espe cially for lung troubles, that has been sold all over the civilized world in many thousands of households for the last, fifty-four years. Its merits have stood this test of time and use, and surely no test could be more potent t»r convincing. It gives the patient with weak and Inflamed lungs a good night’s rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration in the morning. Try one bottle, accept no substitute For sale by all druggists and dealers tn medicine everywhere—Adv. How to Treat A Torpid Liver The liver is the largest and most Im portant organ In the body, and when the liver refuses to act. It causes constipa tion, biliousness, headachos, indigestion, gas, sour stomach, bad breath, dysen tery, diarrhoea, pains In back and under shoulder blades and under ribs on right side. These symptoms lead to colds, In fluenza or other serious troubles unless corrected immediately. An Inactive liver places an extra bur den on the kidneys, which overtaxes them and causes the blood to absorb and carry Into the system the Impurities that the liver and kidneys have failed to elim inate. When you treat the liver alone, you treat only a third of your trouble, and that is why you have to take purgative* every few nights. Calomel or other ordi nary laxatives do not go far enough. If you would treat your kidneys and blood while treating the liver you would put your entire system In order and frequent purgatives would then be unnecessary. Dr. W. L. Hitchcock many years ago recognized these Important facts, and aft er much study and research, compounded what Is now known as Dr. Hitchcock's Liver, Kidney and Blood Powders thre« medicines combined In one. This was the Doctor’s favorite prescription for many years, being used by his patients with marked success. It Is a harmless vege table remedy that will not make you sick, and you may eat anything you like while taking 11- Get a large tin box from your druggist or dealer for 25c, under his personal guar antee that It will give relief, tone up the liver, stimulate the kidneys to healthy action and thereby purify the blood. If your dealer will not supply you, It will be mailed direct by the Hitchcock Medi cine Co., Atlanta, Ga., upon receipt of price.—Adv. Credit to the Profession. "Who are the principals In the breach of promise suit?" asked Mr. Dubwaite. “A telephone girl and a millionaire," answered Lawyer Beagles, “if you wil.1 pardon the slang, she seems to have his number.” "Ah! And how long did It take her to get his number.” “About two years.” "She’s a telephone girl, all right l"-— Birmingham Age-Herald. Even In the “fatherland” they speak the mother tongue. URm Nitfht and Morning. Have Strong, Healthy Eyt*. If they Tire,Itch, Smart or Bum, if Sore, Irritated, Inflamed oi Granulated, use Murine often. Sootbaa, Refreshes. Safe fcx Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write fot Free Eye Book. MntaE* tarty Ckta» Y&urEVES DYE RIGHT- / Buy only “Diamond Dyes’* Each package of "Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye worn, shabby skirts, waists, dresses, coats, gloves, stockings sweaters, draperies every thing, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, new. rich fadeless col ors. Have druggist show you "Dia- trend Dyes Color Card.”—Adv. Feet. To dream you bathe your feet de notes trouble in collecting money which Is due you. To dream of lurge or deformed feet foretells a journey which will cost you many tears. To scratch the bottom'of your feet de notes treachery and flnttery. To have no feet at all Is an evil omen; it fore tells some great calamity. Cold feet foretells a quarrel with a friend. * “Pape’s Diapepsin” Corrects Stomach “Pape’s Diapepsin" is the quickest, sur est relief for Indigestion, Gases, Flatu lence, Heartburn, Sourness, Fermentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost Immediate stoiftach relief and shortly the stomach Is corrected so you can eat favorite foods without fear. Large case costs only 6C cents at drug store. Absolutely harmless and pleasant. Millions helped annually. Best stomach corrective known—Adv. Modest Apprehension. "That audience cheered you for al least half an hour.” “Yes," replied Senator Sorghum; "1 began to suspect that the folks would rather listen to their own demonstra tions than to hear me speak.” Cuticura Comforts Baby's Skin When red, rough and itching with hot baths of Cuticura Soap und touches of Cuticura Ointment. Also make use now and then of that exquisitely seent- ed dusting powder, Cuticura Talcum, one of the indispensable Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Adv. Tokens of Honesty. At some of the London docks, when two men make a trade agreement, they exchange black beans as tokens of honesty. This is regarded as more binding that a written and signed con tract. 99 OUT OF ICO Need Vacher-Balm at Times. Nothing better for summer colds, hurts or itching. Keep it handy. Agents wanted where we have none B. W. Vacher, Inc., New Orleans. La-—Ady. in the Art Gallery. “Statue of Julius Caesar. Ratbei bald.” "The next one is Baldur.”—Louis ville Courier-Journal. HI SCHOOL NEWS. He who rnns may read, but if he’* running for office the less he has t< say the better. No, Luke, women don’t mean It whci they kiss each other; they just do t for practice. The school was especialy glad to re ceive another visit from the • presi dent of the board of education, Mr. C. D. Redwine. He came last Tuesday to look us over and to form some tsti- mation of our growing .needs, which he hopes will be met in the new school. The signs are hopeful, and so are we. Hoop ’er up! Hoop ’er up! Hoop ’er some more! Fayette Hi! The girls are backing up a great part of this enthusiasm.•* Those in the sixth and seventh grades have organized a jim dandy basket ball team. The eighth grade girls, who are planning to organize are sitting up and taking note of the strength of this possible rival. The boys had a meeting Mon day morning to discuss the improve ment of the tennis court. It was de cided that the best thing to do would be to put a cement wall on the east- side to keep the sand from washing away. The domestic’scidnce department is still on the job. The first pieces of sewing, which, appropriately enough, are sewing apons, are almost in the final stage of completion. For some girls these first aprons initiate them into the thrifty and gentle art of nee dle craft. Our cooks will make and sell sandwiches and cookies this Tuesday. Judging from their past suc cesses, we all hope we can Btir up a nickel or dim to indulge our appetites in their rare delicacies. It has been our custom to / have each year an honor roll composed of those students who made A, which is the letter for excellence (90-100). They are: SECOND GRADE: Rosa Lee Driver. J. P. Kerlin. Furman Mason. Askew McLucas. Dorothy Perry. Edward Sams. THIRD GRADE: Braxton Blalock. Kathleen Blalock. Willie Earl Goodman. James Jones. Georgia Martin. ,FOURTH GRADE: Mary Martin. Louise Hollingsworth. SIXTH GRADE: Sara Belle Matthews. Dorothy Redwine. Irene Dixon. FIRST GRADE: Margaret Wise. Victor Brogdcrn. SEVENTH GRADE: Mildred Stell. Mildred Seawright. Paul Vollenweider. NINTH GRADE: Edna Stephens. TENTH GRADE:. Edgar Tatum. BROOKS. Everything about Brooks has be come normal since the school rally and barbecue the 17th of September. Then the Flint River Association and barbecued dinner for two days a few days later rather upset our eating and regular diet; hence it has been a lit tle dififcult to get back to normal ev ery day fare, but had to, and things are lovely now these Indian summer days. Some one entered J. N. Parsons’ place of business recently and stole a sack of sugar and othe rthings. The empty sack was found near Vaughan. Some miscreant placed obstructions across the highway between Vaughn and the Six-Mile Post in four differ ent places Friday night, about . 11 o’clock. People in autoes ad to clear away the obstructions before (they could pass. Mrs. Shivers has been in a criti cal condition for sveral days; hope she may be improved at an early date. Master Hugh Price is yet very sick with typhoid. The others who have been sick are convalescing nicely. This section will mhke slightly over a 40 per cent cotton crop. The most of it is now opened. ' Will Have No Fair At a mass meeting of the citizens on Thursday night it was decided not to have any county fair at this season as was at first proposed. It is highly probable that Fayette county will have a fair some time in the future, and, inasmuch as she will have more time and better opportunity to give such a project sufficient publicity the people of this county will consequent ly be better prepared to make it the success our people would have It to be. Quarterly Conference. The fourth quarterly conference of the Fayetteville-Ebenezer Charge will be held at Ebenezer Church the fourth Sunday in October, the 25th. All the trustees, Sunday school su perintendents, stewards, officers )of the Woman’s Missionary Society and other church officers are urged to be present, A cordial Invitation is ex tended to the public. Sincerely, GEO. P. GARY, Pastor. Ginned Report. There were 563 bales of cotton, counting round as half bals, ginned in Fayette county, from the crop of 1920 prior to September 25, 1920, as com pared with 3,368 bales ginned to Sep tember 25, 1919. FOR SALE. I wish to sell my home, containing nine building lots, a good dwelling, south front, house with five rooms and pantry; a good barn and garage; a good wired-in garden; everything in good condition. Said premises located on Redwine Btreet, North Fayetteville. Those wishing a good home had bet ter see me soon. A. ROSENBLOOM. ' Malady of Doubt. There are plenty of people who think that to doubt everything* shows com mon sense and shrewdness, whereas it may indicate only a narrowmlndness. But there is an uneasy doubting of one’s self which, If not resisted, may become almost a disease. Often, though perfectly sure that we did lock the door, or deliver an injunction, or put a memorandum in our pocket, we nourish the doubt all day, or turn out our pocket on our way to work. One symptom of this malady is the hurried, worried search for a missing article in every place save where it usually is, and the astonishment at finding it there. Old Pennsylvania City. * York, Pa., is a city of ancient origin. Here was located the fiist settlement west of the Susquehanna river. From September 30, 1777, to June 27, 1778, she was the nation’s capital, for dur ing that time, the British then occupy ing Philadelphia, the continental con gress met In her courthouse. The first money sent by the king of France tc| aid the cause of American iudepend< ence was received by congress in this city. And here the first national Thanksgiving proclamation was issued. Trying to do business without ad vertising is like a man winking at a girl in the dark. GEORGIA—Fayette County. By vitrue of an order granted ,by the ordinary of Fayette county, on the first Tuesday in November, 1920, with in the legal hours of sale, to the high est and beet bidder for cash, the fol lowing described property, to-wit: Twenty acres of land, more or lesB, in the southwest corner of lot of land No. 139, in the 538th district, G. M., said state and county, and bounded as follows: North by Albert Reeves, east by other lands belonging to the estate of L. C. Spurlin, south and west by Wilder lands. Also forty acres of land, more or less, in the northwest corner of lot of land No. 140, in the 538th district, G. M., said state and county, and bounded as follows: North by land be longing to Mrs. Mollie Dickerson; east by Mrs. Mollie Dickerson and J. W. Wise; south by Mrs. Ellen Smarr; west by other lands belonging to the estate of L. C. Spurlin and by Albert Reeves and the dower lands of Mrs. Sarah Jones. Said land to be sold as the property of Mrs. L. C. Spurlin, deceased, and for the purpose of paying the debts of said deceased and making distribu tion among the heirs at law and lega tees. O. L. SPURLIN, A. C. KERLIN, Executors of Mrs. L. C. Spurlin, De ceased. A Mother's Maxim. When Frederick Temple, the late archbishop of Canterbury, was a pom boy, wearing pntohed clothes and patched shoes, he hud the good fortune to have a wise mother who stimulate*? and encouraged the right kind of am bition, and directed his zeal. One day the boy waxed critical over the incon sistency of English spelling, when his mother chided him gently. "Freddie don't argue; do your work.” The les son was not lost on his open mind. He followed the sage advice. And long years after, when as primate of all England he had arisen to a position scarcely second to any in dignity and Influence in the land he acted on his mother’s counsel: “Don’t argue; do your work.”—F. H. Cheley l« “Stories for Talks to Roys.” Our word, diligence, is from the La tin, “dlligenciq.” It means the quality of being diligent; interested and per severing application; devoted and painstaking effort to accomplish whnt is undertaken; assiduous industry; careful attention. Industry has the wider sense of the two words, imply ing an habitual devotion to labor for some valuable end, as knowledge or property. Diligence denotes earnest application to some specific object or pursuit which more or less directly has a strong hold on one’s interest or feelings Bird of III Omen. The raven figures in many super stitions and is invariably considered i bird of ill omen, and its unexpected ippearance a sign of death or disaster, it was dedicated by the Romans to Apollo, and there is a strange Greek legend telling how the bird was chang ed from white to black. Peculiar Armenian Custom. American divorces might be de- rreased by the introduction of an old Armenian custom which forbids a iride to speak to any man other than her husband for seven years, suggests t near East relief worker, writing from Erivnn, Armenia.—World Outlook. WRtGim 5 £a package k before the war 5 5 £a package 1 during the war and * a package NOW The Flavor Lasts So Does the Price! Hunting Trouble. “What makes you think the ex- kaiser hate* peace?” “I understand he is anxious to get back to Berlin.” Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of 3ASTORIA, that famous old remedy Cor infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of. In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria POINTED OUT BRIGHT SIDE Optimist’s Brave Effort to Oonvince Afflicted Man That the Cloud Had Silver Lining. Mr. Jnergins had been suddenly af flicted with a stiff neck. Not only was it a painful stiffness, but it caused him to twist bis head around until he seemed to be trying to look behind him over bis left shoulder, and his head was rigid In that pose. “Of all the confounded trials a man was ever subjected to," he said, “this Is the limit. They say to look on the bright side of our afflictions, but I’d like to know how I could make use of this stiff neck." "My dear friend,” said the optimist "think what a golden opportunity this Is to sit for your picture without hav ing to allow the photographer to twist your head around that way and jab those ice-cold tongs into the back of your neck!” Best Weather Sign. Those who live by the coast do not want a better weather sign than the gulls, which In the various winds that will bring the rain collect In big flocks over the land, wheeling nnd scream ing uneasily. They will not come In on a false alarm, and none need fear they will make a mistake. The Reason. “Why do the lawyers try so much hot air on witnesses?" “Because they want to pump them.” PRESSED STEEL AUTOMOBUJK LUGS* the most practical device known to extricate autos or trucks out of mud, snow, mire hr through bad roads. Every auto driver euer stuck on a road Is a prospect 1 vs customer. A set should bo In every automobile. Q”* apply In one minute without soiling hanc Any bad road as easily traveled as a bottf. yard. Retail price, per set four lugs, t8.0t. Dealers and distributors wanted. Write im mediately for full Particulars or send lor sample set. WORLD-OVER SALES COM PANY. BOB Fifth Avenue. New York City. KeepYourSkin-Pores Active and Healthy With Cuticura Soap Soap 25c, Ointment 25 nnd 50c, Tnknm 25c. WHAT THE TEACHER THOUSrff Comment That Took a Whole Lot of Conceit Out of One Small Coy’s Daddy. "The world is full of fault finders,’' remarked Professor Pritchard at a din ner recently, "and one of the rao&t common targets is the modern educa tional system. No more common ex pression than, ‘Well, they used to real ly teach us something when I went to school.’ "I have a friend like that, but the other day he told me he was through. It came about in this wav. He used to help his little son with his honk© studies. One evening, as they were about to begin, be asked the little ch$p what his teacher said regarding hfs home work. " ’She says Fm getting stupider every day,’ replied the lad, and from then on he had to do his home lessons alone." Overworked. Mrs. Knicker—Have you had a busy week? Mrs. Bocker—Rather; I’ve had two husbands, three landlords and four cooks.—Sun and New York Herald. To go far, It will help to start early each morning. Time is of no value to a man who falls to use It Hie Blended Flavors of wheat and malted barley, fully de veloped by twenty hours baking make Grape=Nuts The Ideal Cereal Ideal not only from a taste standpoint but because of easy digestibility, full nourishing worth, economy and ease of service. At Grocers Everywhere