Newspaper Page Text
jj
~Ai^i'jrriMoircßrr--
AVcgelablePreparsiionforAs.
ffl^MWalßeSL
b “™achsarjßowelsof j
BSppPtld
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
ness and Resr.Contalns neittr
Opiuiu.Morphine norMiueral
Not Narcotic.
Xecyt efOkllkSlMXimaa
fimpim S*J~
jttxJmun* \
JkMUMtt- I
jioiseSml* I
dss>
tfirm Serf- I
)
■—■ m
Aperfeet Remedy for Ccmsßpa
tton, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss or Sleep.
Facsimile Signature of
dL*oi3£-
•The Centaur Compart,
___ NEW YORK
Hlg :
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
UNDERTAKING |
■ “Ta THORNTON, ' j
LICENSED EMBALMED.
Full line of Caskets and Robes to select from.
My careful personal attention given to all funerals entrusted
to me.
Calls answered promptly day or night.
' DAY PHONE 174. SIBHT PHONE 193.
* JACKSON, GEORGIA.
yy MyMamma Says
Its Safe JS/L
il for Children!
Slim %f
- £<3^4r l)
A-,?/ f vM
\sfa- - I £-'•</ik 'lVfP'r
l ■ rU'4|j t vIR MimrV
lUlkii: FOLEY S
Children’s Chi!- I !F
Bren” are now using Q gi*
Boley’s Honey and Tar 9 JSmtt
■ompound and it is to- f
■ay the same safe effec- A jm. BJP
■v e and curative med- 1.
■ine thattheirparents
■undit. Forallcoughs, FOR
■ids, croup, whooping <■ 1 j
■ough, bronchitis, 1 aryriQhc and I OICIS
and tickling a^mmmmmmam
■ throat, use it. It - ®
■ves satisfactory re- CONTAINS NO OPIATES
■ its. fi w 7l I H 2——■
■ For Sale by Jackson Drug Cos., Jackson. Qa.
I mnegTground Trade
I Whitestone-Limestone
■l All Lands and All Crops Noad It.
is For information, price.', •• _
\ Buttrill Guano Co. f Agents, Jackson, ua,
V”**" whitestone Marble Company, a &
W. P. Pratt, Chairman of Board J
ciSTomt
Tor Infants^ndJThTMrpn^
The Kind You Have
Always Bough!
Bears the t
Signature /Aw
of w
A JfC* In
rti Use
\j* For Oyer
Thirty Years
CASTOBU
?►*>' **f’***Y*l'H COMPANY. NEW YCN SITY.
ANOTHER BUNKO GAME
Mrs. De Farm—l notice since them
city boarders arrived old Hiram Hill
top has taken down his scarecrow.
Mr. De Farm —Yeou bet! He is
catching all the crows he can and
palming, them off on the greeu city
folks as 'dark spring chicken.”
PUT HIM WISE
Her Father—l’ve no objection to
yoar marrying my daughter, but i
hope you’ve got a good digestion.
Her suitor —Why?
Her Father—AVell, she's been going
to a cooking school for the last two
months.
HiS GETTING OUT PLACE
p[
Mrs. Kinder —It seems to me for a
man claims to deserve charity
you have a very red nose.
Beggar—Well, mum, the cheap soap
I use is very hard on my complexion,
mum.
VERY ODD
Policeman—-Why did that man strike
you in the face?
Smith —He said he was an “Odd Fel
low,” and I told him he looked the
part.
NATURAL ADVANTAGES
ijl
Quiz —So you like the experience you
have of keeping bees?
Whiz —Yes; you see. no matter how
the market is depressed In other
things. it is a bus laps* which keep on
hamming. —* ——
DIRECTOR OF ROYAL KITCHEN
King George’s Chef, Among Other At
tribute* le Noted for His Exces
sive Punctuality.
One of the remarkable men in the
employ of King George of England
is his chef. Punctuality is his most
striking characteristic, and ho has
the reputation of being the most
punctual man in Great Britain, .lust
as Big Ben, in the tower of the
housess of parliament announces
eleven o’clock, an automobile stops in
front of Buckingham palace, and a
man, who apj>ears to be about fifty
years old, alights. He is neatly
dressed • in the latest Bond street
fashion, and always wears a high
silk hat. He also wears gold spec
tacles. On entering the palaee he
goes to the kitchen. All the cooks
and dishwashers, on seeing him, take
off their white hats and stand at
attention. The chef takes his place
at a small desk, and the menu of
the king, after passing the inspec
tion of Lord Farquhar, is brought
to him. He studies the menu a few
minutes, turns it over to the “sous
chef,” and leaves the palace. Ex
actly at 5:00 p. m. he returns, and
then takes charge of the preparation
of the king’s dinner. He oversees
the undercooks, ordering them to do
this or that, like a veritable com
mander-in-chief. Sometimes, but
very rarely, the king’s chef takes a
hand himself in the preparation of
a special sauce or of one of the king’s
favorite dishes. His exactitude is
proverbial. • He never arrives at the
palace a minute too soon, nor does
lie leave a minute behind time.
AGAIN THE HIGH COST
} -
0 c % s .
First Fish—Yes, Vlrs. Scales, I
never, never saw worms so high as
they arc today.
ROMAN ARCHITECTURE.
It was largely their development
of the dome and the'arched roof in
masonry that enabled the Romans to
build on a scale of daring and mag
nificence which has not been sur
passed in our modern age of steel.
Recent; excavations in Nero’s palace
have revealed live subterranean
vaulted rooms in the proximity of
the dining room, which were built
as fish tanks and used to keep fish
aliye for the use of the imperial
table. The vault and the dome or
round roof of the Romans served the
purpose of the modem I-beam and
latticed roof girder as used hy the
present-day architect and engineer.
—Scientific American.
TO BE EXPECTED.
“I hear the head o.f the hand has
decamped with the money.”
“Well, you might expect the drum
major to beat it.”
If You Want
RVOU can get
-*• them hy ad
vertising in this
E paper. It reaches
the best class of
S people in this
community.
u ”“
L
T =====
Lse this paper if
Syou want some
of their business.
Use This Paper
Why Wrestle With the Red Hills
And Rocks for a Mere Pittance?
*
Come to South Georgia and Live in Ease and
Comfort. \
Lowndes County lies m tlie wiregrass section of South Georgia and
borders the state of Florida. The lands are gen rally level, but sufficient
drainage, and the soil is of varied kinds, such as clay, sandy’ loam and in
fact lias any soil desired by lionieseekers.
Glider proper methods ol' cultivation all Hie lands are verv produc
tive. Tlie whole country is wonderfully blessed in having streams of
water teeming with all kinds of fresh water fish; in I'rtct, it is a fisher
man's paradise, and no section of our country can raise a greater variety
of crops than this section which is known for its fertility of soil, mild
climate, healthy’ people, and old time Southern Hospitality.
The principal crops grown are aotton, both upland and sea island,
corn, peas, sweet p Jtatoss, sugar cane, and in fact all kinds of vegetable#
grown by farmers, and last but not least, the cantaloupe and Georgia
watermelon. Ohs hundred bushels of corn can and has been easily pro
duced on one acre and as high as one hundred and twenty bushels has
been produced by special effort, and a bale of long staple cotton can be
produced on an acre, and the same brings from 18 to 30 cems per pound.
Within a radius of five miles of Hahira, Ga., a beautiful little town
of one thousand people, in the northern part of the county, there was in
tlie year 1912, seventeen hundred bales of sea island cotton produced, and
other crops in proportion. Stock raisers and lovers of poultry, turn your
foot-steps this way and let us show you that we have the country for you
and that our advantages are so many and great that words are inade
quate to describe them. Schools and c lunches within reach of all see
lions, and citizens are law-abiding and ever ready to receive desirable
class ef permanent settlers. Come sea with your own eyes and be con
vinced. Go into the homes of tills people and see their canned vegeta
bles, taste their Georgia cane syrup and other products, become acquaint
ed with our people and see a'‘Georgia Nigger bite a watermelon to the
rlne.” *
References: —Bank of Hahlra.
I will refund transportation to buyers from any point in the South to
Hahiraand return to their home.
ARCHIBALD FARR,
Masonic Building, * HAIIIRA, GEORGIA.
Saved Girl’s Life
“I want to tel! you what wonderful benefit I have re
ceived from the use of Thedford’s Black-Draught,” writes
Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky.
“It certainly lias no equal for la grippe, bad colds,
liver and stomach troubles. I firmly believe Black-Draught
saved my little girl’s life. When she had the measles,
they went in on her, but one good dose of Thedford’s
Black-Draught made them break out, and she has had no
more trouble. I shall never be without
BLack-draugHT
in my home.” For constipation, indigestion, headache, dizzi
ness, malaria, chills and fever, biliousness, and all similar
ailments, Thedford’s Black-Draught has proved itself a safe,
reliable, gentle and valuable remedy.
If you suffer from any of tiiese complaints, try Black-
Draught. It is a medicine of known merit. Seventy-five
years of splendid success proves its value. Good for
young and old. For sale everywhere. Price 25 cents.
Lumber, Sash. Doors
and Blinds.
We manufacture everything that goen in a building and
ship direct to you.
Mail us your bill or come to see us.
415 Peters Building, - Atlanta, Ga.
Patillo Lumber Company.
Everybody’s Doing It!
BUT KISER & RAMSEY
And they are satisfying every customer with their high-class
I): v and Stpm Cleaning and Pressing.
ALL KINDS
Or pressing, cleaning, altering quickly turned out at reason
able prices. Ladies’ Suits a specialty.
% Patronage appreciated.
Kiser & Ramsey Pressing Club.
Sixteen Year’s Experience. jJXext, Door to Chinese Laundry.
Find Right Thinq to Do.
There are many failures because
there arc many persons trying to (Jo
the wrong things. We have no right
to repine at a limit until we are sure
that we have touched it In reality,
there is always enough for each to do,
to accomplish, a plot of land for each
to till; the narrowest capacity has
something, and that something Is
enough, satisfying!y and usefully, to
till a lifetime
Heavy Annual Los* by Tire.
In the United States, in every busi
ness day of the year, 11,000,000 worth
of property Is destroyed, three lives
are lost and 17 persons seriously In
jured by fire.
Wonder Who She Meant.
Mias Carter had not been successful
In bringing young Dodge to her foot,
and in consequence felt a little spite
ful toward him. One evening they
were having quite a serious talk In the
library "l>o you think." asked the
young man, "that men progress after
death?" "Well,” responded the girl,
"If they don't It would almost seem
useless for some of them to die.”
Proves Might of Pen.
A pen nib Is a little thing, yet there
Is more steel used In the manufacture
of nibs than in all the sword and
gun factories In the world. A ton of
steel produces about 1,500,000 pens.