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P| Choice*^
“THe Family Friend*
sMr Foley’sHoney4ar
\lf CONTAINS NO OPIATES'
- if For AD t •
> TO lie ■ HOMER, GA., Mr. J. N. Hill
&Y I VAJI J 1 iti,T W “ys: “I cheerfully testify to. the
■"■ y*f I V merits of Foley’s Honey and-Tsr
gV,/ I AND ■ Compound, having used it ;n. my
■~] I 001 INC ■ ifamil y for and reccommeded
RJvf. I lAII JIN ■t to ¥ n>y neighbors. I find it always
rytX 1 ■ cures * our coughs and colds and
‘l\ \\JXI E Ar HiiMran I croup. I have five children
IUI VILLIUI CD ■ and itis all they ever take for colds.
H N *nd We would not be without Foley’s
Iv. \V D ' I Honey and-Tar Compound ip the
iIA\ rersons I house and can not say too much
• For Sale by All Dealers.
Big Reduction in Prices
Banner Mazda Lamps
HUY your lamp equipment for the entire house today
and get these new low prices on National Mazda
Lamps —the new, rugged kind that give three times as
much light at the same cost. Lowest prices ever named:
10 watt $ .35 each
15 44 .35 44
20 44 .35 44
25 “ .35 44
40 44 .35 44
60 44 .45 44
100 44 .80 44
Put a Nafional Mazda Lamp in Every Socket
Before You Pay Pour Next Light Bill.
Replaced wssteful carbon lamps with officient Nat
ional Mazdo lamps and get a better quality of iight and
three times as much of it without additional expense.
Stock up on National Mazda lamps now while prices are
down. Fill every empty socket in the house, from cellar
\ic. Enjoy the hospitality of ampie light.
SMITH HARDWARE CO
WINDER, GA. - - PHONE 27.
—to insure complete success take
’ |l|, along a case of M
111 The satisfying beverage—infield
or f° rest > at home or in town!" V
A P u^ e wholesome as M
Delicious—Refreshing jj
Thirst-Quenching M
Demand the Genuine — Soda
Refuse substitutes. Fountains
m Send for Free Booklet. °, r T^ r^? n "
u ated m Bottles.
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA.
ft I PAiUVItRS.
President Barrett Gives
Interesting Views On
Plans Advanced to Help
Dispose of Cotton.
To the Officials and Members of
the Union:
You.can’t pick up a pamper these
days without seeing something on
marketing to aid farmer
to get his production to the con
sumer withMit the great difference
in price as bet ween grower and con
sumer. Commissions of; all sorts
are studying this problem. Indi
viduals, corporations, lawmakers
and societies have the one and only
scheme.' ”ir
It is all mighty well; much of it
all is very edifying. With so much
discussion and planning and schem
ing and uplifting beneficial results
must result. So much agitation can
not take place without getting people
to thinking, and after a while, with
thinking along right lines, real re
sults may come.
But I want to burn into your
brains this idea, which I have stress
ed long and persistently —that the
farmer isn’t going to get any ad
equate, practical, worth-while
marketing plan until he works it
out himself. Moreover, he won’t
accept anybody else’s plan, and 1
know it, as you know it.
If he does accept any semi-be
nevolent scheme in that direction,
he won’t,stand by it. I- know it,
and you know it. It is lest usually
to be blunt when the truth is to be
told, because to soft-soap and palaver
gets nothing but contempt in the
end. I believe the vast majority of
American farmers know now that
I am their friend all the time, and
that I have no axt-s to grind, save
their axes.
So I will stand forth and tell you
he solemn facts, as I see and un
derstand them, as I see and under
stand you. You are not going to get
your emancipation, your freedom
your rights, through commissions,
through individuals, through
corporations, aye. even through your
great government. It MUST come
from your own efforts, your own
organization, through plans for
mulated within your own ranks —
and, I believe, through the Farmers
Union.
Do not understand that T min
imize or would stop others in honest
and genuine endeavor to solve your
problems and get down to a tangi
ble, workable, common sense plan
for marketing- There are many un
selfish and noble spirits at work,
and as I have stated, by the nation
wide agitation over marketing, good
is bound to oome.
But vou are arbiters and masters
of your own destiny. Work out your
own plans, oi let such plan come
as the solid, concrete action from
your own folk- Then when it is in
definite from, stand fast by your
guns. Foemen on every side will
assault your ramparts, but STAND
BY YOURGUXS Patience, pluck,
endurance,co-operation, determina
tion, principle, leadership —all are
needed. Get them, brother; g*'t
them all. Then we’ll get somewhere.
C.S. BARRETT.
Union City, Ga., July 3, 1913.
STOP IN ATLANTA
AT HOTEL EMPIRE
Oposite Union Depot on Pryor
St. Renovated and refurnished
thruout. Reservations made on
application. Hot and cold water,
private baths, electric, lights and
elevator.
First class accommodations at
extremely moderate rates. Euro
pean plan 75c up.
JOHN L. EDMONSON
Proprietor.
more:
Make your horses and
mules give you more work,
your cows more milk, your
chickens more eggs, your
hogs more meat and fat,
by mixing a small dose of
Bee Dee
STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE
with their regular feed.
This tonic medicine im
proves the appetite, diges
tion, and general health, of
farm animals and fowls,,
and its regular use will
multiply your profits.
Prtc* Be 80c cad H.OO per Ofl.
**Wc far* Bm Dtf Stock Mcdida* to
two Cow* and their Bow of tUk wu
doablcd. ,, -TL Cole. Ootn.
Bankers Sound Warning.
Atlanta, Ga., July O—The Geor
gia Bankers Association has sent
out to all farmers, ginners, Cotton
seed oil men, cotton exporters and
compressers, a warning of the vital
necessity of ’seeing that all baled
cotton shipped out of Georgia this
year conforms to the rules recently
laid down by the stean sh’p and
railroad lines. This warning is
signed by President Hillyer and
secretary Haynes McFadden. It
shows that owing to the large and
alleged unjust claims which have
been made against the railroads for
damages., the railroads have estab
lished a set of rules by which their
agents shall rigidly inspect cotton
submitted for shipmet, and note all
bills of lading, whether the cotton
is wet, stained, dirty, insufficiently
or improperly haled.
The bankers association calls at
tention to tin' fact that if the con
ditions of cotton justifies these nota
tions will destroy the negotiability
of the bills of lading so far as the
banks are concerned, and that it
will become impossible for the ex
porter or cotton buyer to draw
through New York or other financial
centers for the value of the cotton.
“It is of grave import that all
cotton interests in your territory
conform to these rules.” says the
Bankers’ Association.
Unsightly Face Spots.
Are cured by Dr. Hobson’s Ec
zema Ointment, which, heals all
skin eruptions. No matter how
long you have been troubled by
itching, burning, or scaly skin
humors, just put a little of that
soothing antiseptic, Dr. Hobson’s
iEczem a Ointment, on the sores
and the suffering stops instantly.
Mr. Alleman, of Littletown, Pa.,
says: “Had eczema on forehead;
Dr. Hobson’s Eczema Ointment
cured it in two weeks.” Guaran
teed to relieve or money refund
ed. AH druggist, or by mail.
Price 50 cents. Pfeiffer Chemical
Go., Philadelphia and St,. Louis.
Oh You Calomel
get out of the way and let LIV
VER-LAX do the work, purely
Vegetable, ask DR. J. T. WAGES
DRUG CO.
Unclog the Liver
Headache Goes
To put vour upset liver in fine
shape, to drive poisonous waste from
bowels and cure constipation use
HOT SPRINGS
LIVER BUTTONS
from the famous Hot Springs, Ark.
Takeoneeach night for a. few days;
you'll eat better, work better, sleep
better, your eyes will brighten and
your skin grow clearer. cents.
Free sample LIVF.R BUTTONS and booklet
about the famous Hot Springs Rheumatism
remedy and llot Springs Blood Remedy at
For Sale by
Dr. J T. Drug Cos.
Winder, Ga.
By. Rev Marry L. Moreland.
Some few years age# in a certain
church in a certain village a tem
perance lecture was given. The
speaker urged the signing of the
pledge. A Woman’s Christian Tem
perance Union was organized.
In that audience were a number
of young people, among them were
two sisters who were in company
each with a gentleman friend. Both
of thp young men drank the social
glass and were opposed to the sign-,
ing of the temperance pledge, and
they sought to keep the- young wo
men from becoming identified
with the Temperance movement.
They sneered and laughed at the
whole thing. Both of the young
sisters w-re deeply interested. Fi
nally the older said, “I shall sign
the pledge and help in this work!”
She did so. Her companion, her
fiance, said, “Then we are done;
1 never will marry a temperance
fanatic.” Thus the two separated,
for she was firm and he was deter- 1
mined.
The other sister did not sign tl e
pledge because of her attending
friend. She feared to oppose him,
so she went his way. The elder
sister threw her whole soul into the
temperance cause. She prayed and
worked to save others. Deep in her
heart she remembered the young
man who had lmnso untrue and
disloyal to principle, and prayed
that he might he delivered from the
drink habit.
And he, too felt more deeply than
he was willing to acknowledge.
The more he thought of it the more
he was convinced that she was right
and he was wrong. But how to be
willing to confess it!
She still prayed and that wond
rous Spirit, sent by the Father of
Light, worked, too, and one day,
under the influence, he saw the folly
of the drink habit; saw his young
associates falling round about him,
and saw, too, that there was no such
thing as moderation in drink. It
was either “quit” or to go the ways
of his associates on—on down, down.
He acknowledged his wrong; took
the pledge, and the young friend
who had l>een so brave, was married
to him. Several children came into
their home. They, too, were known
for strong temperance principles.
The other sister, who had been
kept from signing the temperance
pledge, married the man of her
choice, the one who had kept her
from signing the temperance pledge
He kept on with the drink habit,
and in time liecarne a hard drinker;
his home became the home of a
drunkard. His children became
the children of a drunkard. Might
not the wife have been saved from
such a- fate as the wife of a drunk
ard had she been brave and true to
the principles of right? Would it
have paid to have signed the temp
erance pledge? Does it not pay for
our young women to be brave?
For Weakness and Loss of Appetitd
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out
Malaria and builds up the system. A true tonia
and sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c.
J Are You a Woman ?'
The Woman’s Tonic j
FOR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS i