Newspaper Page Text
JULY 29, 1920.
‘COULD SHOUT FOR
JOY,’SHE STATES
Illinois Woman Is Happy Over Her
Restoration to Health.
‘1 am so happy I f ‘ H>l I,ke
for Joy and 1 simply have to tell every
body 1 meet what Tanlac has done for
me,” said Mrs. K. Knebell, of 61!*
Mathew street, Peoria, 111. “ JUKt "
short time ugo I was such a perfect
wreck that 1 saw no hope of enjoyment
iu life,” she continued, “and today 1
haven’t a trouble of any kind.
“Even as a Kiri I was never strong
and healthy and as time passed new
troubles set In. Every bite I ate hurt
me and 1 would have severe cramps, gas
formed and presses around my heart
so bad 1 had to light for breath. My
kidneys caused me to have backache
until 1 thought it would drive me dis
tracted and if I tried to stoop over my
back felt like it would break in two, and
even the weight of my clothes hurt me
so much I had to have them made so
their weight was all on my shoulders.
When I tried to sweep the floor or cook
a meal 1 became so weak and dizzy 1
had to lie down, and my nerves
were so shattered I could hardly
ever sleep at night. This was
my condition for twenty long years—
not one day, but every day and I could
never get any pleasure out of life.
“When you go this way year in and
year out and then find a medicine like
Tanlac it just seems too good to lie true.
My appetite is now splendid and I eat
hearty three times a day without a hit
of trouble afterwards. My kidneys
never bother me any more and the
pain hi my hack lias disapperaed en
tirely. I never have dizzy spells now
and my nerves are so steady I sleep
all night long like a child. I am so
strong that I do all my house work and
never get tired, and 1 am so happy
over my splendid health that I ean
hardly contain myself and I will never
be able to praise Tanlac enough."
Tanlac is sold in every town by one
good druggist.
SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION
MULBERRY ASSOCIATION
The Second Section of the Mulberry
Association will meet in Sunday School
convention at White Plains church, five
miles west of Jefferson on the Hosch
ton road, Sunday, August 15th. lhe fol
lowing program has been arranged
it:.'{() a. in.—Prayer service.
10:00 a. m. — Song service conducted by
Prof. .1. li. Vernon of Watkins
ville and Mrs. J. 15. Vaughan of
Athens.
10:30 a. m.—Bible Authority for Sun
day School—J. 15. Brookshire, Auburn.
11 :(K a. m.—Sermon, L. E. Roberta,
College Park.
Dinner.
1:15 p. in. —Devotional, W. P. Holland
1 ;30 p. m.—Song service, McNeal
Brothers, Bellmont.
o j, ni> —why Should Sunday School
Officers Be Elected hy Church.
J. P. Eley.
2:30 p. m.—The Christian Obligation
to the Sunday School —L. L.
Bennett, Oukwood.
3.00 p. m. —Sermon, W. L. Culberson,
Commerce.
STATHAM HAS FINE MEETING
Splendid meeting came to a close
at the Statham Baptist church last
Friday night. Dr. L. A. Henderson,
of Lawrenceville. did the preaching in
an aide and efficient manner.
Dr. D. L. Spooner, of the Atlanta
Tabernacle, led the music.
Fourteen were added to the church
roll.
A committee was appointed from the
Statham, Bogart and Bethabara
churches to arrange to form a Held
and locate a pastor at a salary of ss2,-
(hmi per year. This will make one of
the most attractive pastorates in the
state. Our sister city is growing relig
iously, as well as socially and finan
cially.
A young man in Wyoming drove two
miles alone before he discovered that
his sweetheart had fallen out of the
buggy. Love-making in that state must
lack some of the order that character
izes it around here.
Mrs. Linda liarrold Endorses Cham
berlain’s Tablets.
•‘I suffered for years with stomach
♦rouble and tried everything 1 heard
of but the only relief I got was tem
porary until lust spring I saw Chamber
lain’s Tablets advertised and procured
a bottle of them from our druggist. 1
got immediate relief from that dread
ful heaviness and pain in the stomach
after eating. Since taking two bottles
I can eat anything I want without
distress” writes Mrs. Linda liarrold,
Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Don’t skim the cream off the milk
of human kindness before peddling it
out.
SENATOR HOKE SMITH HAS
SERVED HIS MINTS
He Has Made the Interest and Welfare of His Constituents
His First Duty and Greatest Pleasure in Official Service
—Some of His Work in Washington.
1. Cotton Exchange Regulations.
Helped perfect and had charge on
the Anal passage in the Senate of
the Smith-Lever Act, to regulate
cotton exchanges, and to prevent
them as far as possible from put
ting down the price of cotton.
2. Cotton Market* Saved. Intro
duced and passed through the Sen
ate the resolution which obtained
from Great Britain in October,
1914, admission of our right to ship
cotton into Germany and Austria. As
a result, nearly three million bale*
of cotton were shipped from the
United States into Northern and
Middle Europe before March 1,
1915, and the price advanced in
Georgia from below 6 cents to 10
cents a pound.
3. British Lawlessness Attacked
and Cotton Prices Protected. Great
Britain, during March, 1915, repu
diated her admissions, and ordered
cotton shipped to neutral ports of
Northern Europe seized. Senator
Smith attacked this British action,
and also attacked the order made
August 21, 1915, by Great Britain,
declaring cotton contraband! Brit
ish statesmen well knew their con
duct was illegal, and, largely to
check the hostile feeling caused by
the fight Senator Smith was lead
ing, British interests bought over
two million bales of cotton in Sep
tember, 1915. German interests
bought one million bales, hoping
cotton would be shipped to Ger
many. The shipment of the first
three million bales, and the pur
chase of the three million bales
just mentioned carried the price of
cotton in the Fall of 1915 to figures
higher than those at which it sold
before the war began. But for this
advance in the price oi cotton there
would have been losses in all lines
•f industry and suffering by all
the people of Georgia and the
South.
4. Cotton Price Fixing. Helped
defeat in the Senate bills in 1917
intended to fix a maximum price
upon cotton without making the
maximum the minimum price. This
proposed legislation was especially
unfair because it would have pre
vented an advance in price, but not
a fall in price.
5. Cotton and the War Industries
Board. Fought Baruch’9 War In
dustries Board in September, 1918,
when they sought to create a sin
gle purchasing agency to buy cot
ton, and to fix a maximum price
for all cotton exported without
even guaranteeing against a fall
in price.
6. Cotton and the War Trades
Board. The War Trades Board,
after the Armistice, was hindering
the export of cotton. Senator
Smith hammered at them and
gradually succeeded in causing a
removal of restrictions. Finally,
about June 1, 1919, the Board re
moved the last restrictions upon
the export of cotton, and cotton
went to 36 cents a pound.
From the beginning of the World
War, for five years, Senator Smith
gave much of his time to keeping
open markets and obtaining a fair
price for cotton. In and out of the
Senate he worked, frequently using
the press of the East to publish
articles supporting the price of
cotton for which he paid out of his
own pocket.
7. Agricultural Extension Work.
Prepared and put through the Sen
ate, the Smith-Lever Act for agri
cultural extension work from the
colleges of agriculture, under which
farm demonstrators and teachers
of domestic science are employed.
S. Market Bureau. He introduced,
and put through the Senate the
provision creating a Bureau of |
Before Taking ZIRON, Alabama Man Was Weak,
Nervous, Had No Appetite, But is Now Strong.
EVERY man and woman, who Is in
a run-down, weak condition, with
bad complexion and poor appe
tite, due to lack of iron In their blood,
should find Ziron helpful and strength
building.
It is a scientific, reconstructive tonic,
composed of Ingredients recommended
by leading medical authorities.
Describing his experience with Ziron,
Mr. George W. S. Lanier writes from
Jones, Ala.: ’'Sometime back, I was In
a terrible condition. I was weak and
nervous, and had a tired feeling all
the time. My skin was muddy. I
Gained Ten Pounds
Markets in the Department of Agri
culture,
9. Vocational Rehabilitation of
Wounded Soldiers. Helped prepare
and put through the Senate the
Smith-Sayere Act under which aid
is given to the injured aoldier, to
enable him to prepare again for
active work. He has been an in
tense supporter at every measure
to relieve the condition of the in
jured soldier, and led the fight in
the Senate for the recent $20.00 a
month increase in their compensa
tion.
10. Parcels Post. Helped perfect
and put into active operation, the
parcels post.
11. Good Roads. Supported act
ively national aid to good roads,
and while on the Post Office Com
mittee, with Senators Bankhead and
Swanson, perfected the plan which
was subsequently adopted by the
Senate.
12. Clayton Act. Served on the
sub-committee which perfected this
act and personally had charge of
the provisions of the bill recogniz
ing the legality of fanners’ co-op
erative societies and labor organi
zations
13. Federal Reserve Banking
System. Actively supported and
helped perfect the Federal Reserve
Banking System. At his instance
the number of Federal Reserve
Banks was increased to twelve—
that a proper number might be lo
cated in the South, and he was
largely instrumental in locating one
of them in Georgia.
14. Farm Loan Banks. Helped
perfect and pass the act providing
for farm loan banks by which the
rate of interest charged to owners
of agricultural lands has been
greatly lessened, ar.d by which
purchases of small farms are made
easier.
15. Nitrogen Plant. He’ped ner
fect and pass the Act under which
the Government is creating plants
i for the production of nitrogen from
air, and supported actively th
! provision requiring the use of these
plants in times of peace to furnish
their products to cheapen the cost
of fertilizers for the farmer.
16. Income Tax Reduction. Sen
ator Smith made the fight in the
Finance Committee just after the
Armistice was signed, to reduce
the normal income tax one-third,
and every Georgian, when he pays
his income tax, is getting the bene
fit of this work of their senior
Senator.
17. Georgia Military Camps. Not
only did Senator Smith render effi
cient service in securing military
camps for Georgia during the war,
but his efforts were likewise di
rected towards securing for Geor
gians the contracts for the con
struction of these camps.
The permanent establishment of
the Infantry Officers Training
School—the biggest military school
in the United States and the school
to which West Pointers, after their
graduation, are sent for their ac
tual field training—at Camp Ben
ning, Columbus, was due, in large
part, to the untiring efforts of
Senator Smith.
During the last session of Con
gress, he succeeded in stopping the
attempt to dismantle Camp Gordon.
Senator Smith urges the retention
of this camp, that Georgia boys
and boys from this section of the
Southeast, who enlist in the army,
may be permitted to receive their
training near their homes. The
provision in the military bill, giv
ing an opportunity for men in the
army to take vocational training
and make special preparation to
return to civil life, was introduced
and put through by Senator Smith.
Senator Smith on entering the
Senate sought and obtained an as
signment to the Committee on
Agriculture, as membership on
this Committee gave him the best
opportunity to serve the farming
interests of his state. The work
which he has done for the farming
interests, both of Georgia and of
the country, were recognized in the
Democratic platform, which called
attention, as achievements of the
Democratic Party, to measures
Georgia’s Senior Senator had pre
pared and put through, naming the
Smith-Lever Farm Demonstration
Act and Cotton exchange regula
tion and the Market Bureau and
Warehouse Acts.
Senator Smith has never spared
himself in his earnest and zealous
support of all measures which
would be of value to his constitu
ents, and has never failed to op
pose those which he believed would
burden or injure them.
had no appetite, and at morning I
didn’t feel like getting up. I was
reading of Ziron and decided I would
try It . . .
"Will eay that Ziron is a good medi
cine. I have gained ten pounds in
four months. Am strong and have a
good appetite."
Ziron Is a mild Iron tonic, good for
young and old. ft helps to restoro
the system, when run-down by over
work, under-nourishment, caused by
stomach or bowel disorders, or as a
result of some weakening Illness.
Get Ziron from your druggist He
sells It on a money-back guarantee
THE WINTER NEWS
FARM LANDS FOR THE
FARMER OR INVESTOR
SOUTHWEST GEORGIA, RANDOLPH AND TERRELL COUNTIES
We have high, dry, level land, no Cypress swamps or ponds, Oak and
Hickory lands.
151i/ 2 acres level land, nice 6-room painted house, good barn, one
tenant house, land level, on public road four miles from town. Price
$60.00 per acre.
3414 acres in small town that has Bank, Post Office, Depot, seven
Stores, Gin, Warehouse, etc. 10th grade high school. Excellent place to
live, large 4 room home, one tenant house, large barn. Land all fenced
(however this is a Stock Law Country). Cheap at price of improvements
now on place. Prive $4,000.00; $1,000.00 cash, $1,000.00 January Ist;
balance at 7 per cent.
90 acres in same place, with extra good 8-room home; 84 acres land
in high state of cultivation, two tenant houses. Price §9,000.00 carried
from January Ist at interest.
Look at this place: 1674 acres, large modern home on place, equipped
with water, bath-room, etc., 15 tenant houses; about 800 acres open land
on place; 10 miles hog wire fence. This is an extra good stock farm
proposition. Price $45,000.00.
I can suit you in tracts from 40 acres up to 150. Prices from §30.00
to SIOO.OO per acre.
Come look at what I have to offer.
JOE G. WOODRUFF
CLTIIBERT, : : : : GEORGIA
WHEN A CAR BUCKS
IT IS NOT ALWAYS THE FAULT OF THE CAR
BUT MORE OFTEN OF NEGLECT OR ABUSE
The BEST ENGINE made will not run smoothly forever. It will work
out of adjustment unless given proper care.
If neglected or abused', either through indifference or ignorance, you
must expect trouble, for you will surely have it.
If you are not thoroughly conversant with the mechanism of your
car your wisest course is to see us. Avery few dollars spent now may
save many times the amount later.
SEE US FOR THOSE NEW TIRES AND ACCESSORIES.
WE HAVE THEM.
ALLEN’S GARAGE
ATHENS STREET WINDER, GA.
Hardwick
COMING TO WINDER
AUG. 18TH, 11 O'CLOCK A. M.
The Hon. Thomas W. Hardwick, Can
didate for Governor of Georgia, will ad
dress the voters of Barrow and adjoining
counties at Winder, Ga., August 18th, II
O’Clock, A. M.
R. L . Woodruff
Chairman Barrow County Hardwick Club.
SUBSCRIPTION: $1.56 A YEAR.