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INTERNALCATARRH
“Peruna Has Done Wonders For Me*
I Was So Weak.”
Mrs. M. P.
Curry, P. O.
B ox, 61 5,
'• Petersburg,
Vy" ’■ Ills., writes:
Bjp "I have been
mtroubled with
■lnternal ca
‘■tarrh since
-9 my girlhood,
mytag:: and was sick
jSSfe-j In bed three
wStSm months.
r °!!?T When I was
g|.'' : lH > 'uM able to get up
Mas - J I was so weak
• : . af and thin I
/ could hardly
walk. What
I ate dlsa-
Wr : i greed with
y ‘ tfp me. I had
--M • stomach and
liver trouble,
and my feet
and limbs
were swollen so I could scarcely drag
around.
“I took Peruna and it has done
wonders for me. My cure was a sur
prise to my friends for they never ex
pected to see me well again. I just
took two bottles of Peruna after doc
toring for five months and growing
worse all the time."
Continuous Headache.
Mrs. Esther M. Milner, Box 191,
Be Graff, Ohio, writes: “I was a ter
rible sufferer from internal catarrh,
and had the headache continuously.
I was not able to do my housework
for myself and husband. You recom
mended Peruna. I took four bottles
and was completely cured. I think
Peruna a wonderful medicine and
have recommended It to my friends.”
FIRST FARMERS BANK,
JACKSON, : GEORGIA.
Interest Paid On Time Deposits
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
J. THREATT MOORE,
Attorney At Law.
Office in Crum Building,
Jackson : • Georgia.
Will practice in all the Courts.
C. L. REDMAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office in Carter-Warthen Building,
JACKFON, GA.
DR. O. LEE CHESNUTT
DENTIST
Office in New Commercial Building
back of Farmers’ Bank.
Residence Phone No. 7.
Jenkinsburg School Notes
It has been said that school is
not a preparation for life but that
school is life. We are trying to
teach our pupils the difference
between liberty and license. We
are endeavoring to teach them to
control themselves. The child
who can exercise some degree of
self control has made a long stride
on the road toward good citizen
ship. The greatest handicap we
have in the training of these
young people is the attitude of
the parents themselves. A home
government that is all it should
be would make it impossible for
the parents to look with indif
ference upon crowds of young
boys infesting the stores and con
gregating on the streets learning
bad habits and hearing vile con
versation. I would urge upon the
parents to look to their boys close
ly. Give them something to em
ploy their hands and minds.
There is a saying, “More rope for
boy, more chain for the man.”
This is worth considering. The
future of our grand country de
pends upon the American boy and
girl. If parents could be aroused
to see this we believe they would
BE
Prepared
With the passing of the old year and
the coming of the new, many good oppor
tunities may occur for business expansion.
If you are considering new or addi
tional banking facilities, you are invited to
consult wirh our officers.
An account with us assures Safety, Ef
ficiency and Satisfaction.
$100,009.00
TO LOAN on farm lands. Rea
sonable rate of interest. See me
before you borrow any money on
your farm.
W. E. Watkins.
DR. J. A. JARRELL
Physician and Surgeon
Office Mulberry street.
Residence phone 152-2 —Office 152-8.
Jackson : : : Georgia.
DR. CHAS. R. EITEL
Osteopathic Physician
HOURS 9 TO 5
Phone No. 302.
Harkness Building, Jackson, Ga.
GIVE “SYRUP OF FIGS"
TO CONSTIPATED CHILD
Delicious “Fruit Laxative”
Can’t Harm Tender Lit
tle Stomach, Liver and
Bowels.
Look at the tongue, mother! If
coated, your little one’s stomach,
liver and bowels need cleansing
at once. When peeyish, cross,
listless, doesn’t sleep, eat or act
naturally, or is feverish, stomach
sour, breath bad; has sore throat,
diarrhoea, full of cold, give a tea
spoonful of “California Syrup of
Figs,” and in a few hours all the
foul, constipated waste, undiges
ted food and sour bile gently
moves out of its little bowels
without griping, and you have a
well, playfulchild again. Ask your
druggist for a 50-cent bottle of
4 ‘CaliforniaSyrup of Figs, ’ ’ which
contains full directions for babies,
children of all ages and for
grown-ups. adv
do their part. Until they can be
made to understand, the teacher’s
hands are tied.
The honors for the week were
won by Ida Sue Leverette of the
seventh grade.
In an examination on physiolo-
Professional Piano Tuning,
Regulating & Repairing.
First Class Work Guaranteed.
Drop Card and I’ll Call.
J. T. MA\ O Jackson, Ga.
DR. C. D. HEARD
Office in Mays Building, Resi
dence Buchanan Hotel.
Phone Connections.
Specializing in Diseases of Wo
men and Children.
E. M. Smith H. I). Russell
SMITH & RUSSELL
Attorneys at Law
Office in Warthen Bldg
Jackson : : Georgia
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rev. I. H. Miller, the new min
ister, will preach at 11 a. m. on
Ezekiel’s Vision, ch 1-21; at7p.
m. he will give a Bible reading on
offices of Our Lord.
Sunday School at 10 a. m., Dr.
O. Lee Chesnutt, Supt.
There Is But One
W ell everything is right side up again
i“The other fellow” is handling Coca
Cola, because he knows there is “noth
ing as good. ’ ’ Every bod v handles
it because everybody drinks it.
Drink a bottle. Get rid of the grouch.
Mr. Asa G. Candler has well sugges
ted it is time to quit talking hard times,
and do something. He generously
started the move to advance money on
cotton, and all the banks are following.
So get a bottle of Coca Cola, and put
on a smile. Be sure you get the genuine.
Phone .Your Orders to
JACKSON COCA-COLA
BOTTLING COMPANY,
JACKSON, GEORGIA.
gy Harper Williamson made the
highest grade, May Childs second
The following pupils are enti
tled to honorable mention for the
work of the week:
Lucile Akin, Irene and Forest Bank
ston, Lena Benson, Doyal Coker, Mar
quis Childs, Mary Fletcher, Floyd
Glass, Carrilu Harper, Velma Eever
erette, Odelle Moore, Florence Stalls
worth, W. J. Saunders, Shirley and
Walter Swetnam, Beedie and Sallie
Ruth Thurston, Nellie Guest, Mary
Gray, Mary Lou Farrar, Jewel Glass,
Fanny Tolleson, Minnie Gray, Netea
and Walker Edalgo, Paul Farrar, Mar
goret Gray, Nellie Ingram, Hary Man
ning, Ray Minter, Lillian Fdalgo, Al
bert Saunders, Edward Glass, Marvin
Farrar, Boyd Martin, Velma Cleveland
Florrie Williams, Jesse Tolleson, Geo.
Swetnam, Jessie and Geo. Cleveland,
Ruby Edalgo, Clifford Pressley, Her
schel Williamson, Bennie McClendon,
Saidie Glass, Lucile Martin, Azell
Capps, Morris Duke, Laura Kimbell,
Bankston Farrar, Irma and Dozier
Leverette, Morris Saunders, Cecil Stone
Martha Mills, Annie Lou Glass, Eve
lyn Whitaker, Bennie Lee King, Myr
tice McClendon, Ruth and Lanier Lev
erette, Emma Lou Childs.
W. W. Swetnam.
IKE RURAL
IHURCH
Co-operation of Church, School
and Press Essential to
Community Building.
By Peter Radford.
Lecturer National Farmer*’ Union.
The church, the press and the
school form a tripple alliance of
progress that guides the destiny
of every community, state and
nation. Without them civiliza
tion would wither and die and
through them life may attain its
greatest blessing, power and
knowledge. The farmers of this
nation are greatly indebted to
this social triumvirate for its
uplifting influence, and on be
half of the American plowmen
I want to thank those engaged
in these high callings for their
able and efficient service, and I
shall offer to the press a series of
articles on co-operation between
these important influences and
the farmers in the hope of in
creasing the efficiency of all by
mutual understanding and or
ganized effort We will take up,
first, the rural church.
The Farmers Are Greet Church
Builders.
The American farmer is the
greatest church builder the world
nas ever known. He is the cus
todian of the nation’s morality;
upon his shoulders rests the “ark
of the covenant" jand he is more
responsive to religious influences
than any other class of citizen
ship.
The farmers of this nation
have built 120,000 churches at a
cost of $750,000,000, and the an
nual contribution of the nation
toward all church institutions
approximates $200,000,000 per
annum. The farmers of the Unit
ed States build 22 churches per
day. There are 20,000,000 rural
church communicants on the
farm, and 54 per cent of the total
membership of all churches re
side in the country.
The farm is the power-house
of all progress and the birthplace
of all that is noble. The Garden
of Eden was in the country and
the man fvho would get close to
God must first get close to na
ture.
The Functions of a Rural
Church.
If the rural churches today are
going to render a service which
this age demands, there must be
co-operation between the reli
gious, social and economic life
of the community.
The church to attain its fullest
measure of success must enrich
the lives of the people in the
community it serves; it must
build character; develop thought
and increase the efficiency of
human life. It must serve the
social, business and intellectual,
as well as the spiritual and moral
side of life. If religion does not
make a man more capable, more
useful and more just, what good
is it? We want a practical re
ligion, one we can live by and
farm by, as well as die by.
Fewer and Better Churches.
Blessed is that rural community
which has but one place of wor
ship. While competition is the
life of trade, it is death to the
rural church and moral starvation
to the community. Petty secta
rianism is a scourge that blights
the life, and church prejudice
saps the vitality of many com
munities. An over-churched
community is a crime against
religion, a serious handicap to
society and a useless tax upon
agriculture.
While denominations are es
sential and church pride com
mendable, the high teaching ol
universal Christianity must pre
vail if the rural church is to ful
fill its .mission to agriculture.
We frequently have three or
four churches in a community
which is not able to adequately
support one. Small congrega
tions attend services once a
month and all fail to perform
the religious functions of the
community. The division of re
ligious forces and the breaking
into fragments of moral effort
is ofttimes little less than a ca
lamity and defeats the very pur
pose they seek to promote.