The Jackson progress-argus. (Jackson, Ga.) 1915-current, October 22, 1915, Image 4

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The } Busy Corner Specials For Saturday and Monday Home Ground Meal The kind you get when you go to mill In peck bags 30c In 1-2 bus bags 55c In 1 bus bags sl.lO If you want some sure enough good corn bread try some of this. Tomatoes Standard Quality 3 cans for 20c Oysters Standard 5 oz 3 cans for 20c Lard Absolutely pure hog, dipped from tierce 12 l-2c In 10 lb buckets $1.20 We also have & good hog lard in 10 lb bkts for sl.lO Hams Dairy Brand, we guarantee these hams to please or we will take them back. Per lb I6V2C Salmon Just received some new Sal mon, 1915 pack Chnms 10c or 3 for 25c Pinks 15c or 2 for 25c Sweet Potatoes Genuine Yellow Yams, per peck 25c Sugar Standard granulated ii 25 lb bags per bag $1.50 Wesson Oil pint can for 2Qc Coffee It you haven’t tried some of that SCHOTTENS try It, per lb 25c If you are not already on our list oiPleased custom ers, get there quick and we will save you money. We appreciate your business. RHONE 186 or 93 Carmichael- Mallet Company She Will Recover So her doctor said. Her friends and neighbors felt sure of it too. They have used Peruna themselves and know of its merits. That old cough that had worried her for years and years, for which she had taken all sorts of cough medicines, has disappeared. Peruna is doing the work. She will recover. Indeed, she has recovered. Her nanv l is Mrs. William Hohmann, 2764 Lincoln Ave., Chicago, Ills. She had suffered with catarrh of the bronchial tubes and had a terrible cough ever since a child. As she got older she grew worse. She coughed both winter and sum mer. Had to sit up at night. Could not sleep. “But all that has left me now. Peruna has cured me.” There are others, and there is a reason. HOUDAY FOR AGRICULTURE; MANY COUNTIES TO EXHIBIT Atlanta, October. (Special.) A general state holiday in honor of agri culture, oh Thursday, November 18, will be declared by Governor Nat E. Harris, who will issue his proclama tion on November 5. Two specific events prompted the governor to decide upon this procla mation, first, the Agricultural Day pa rade of the. Georgia Harvest Festival, in which many Georgia counties will participate by entering floats represen tative of their agricultural and other resources, and the fact that it is Geor gia Products Day, on which dinners will be served in from 75 to 100 cities and towns all over the state, composed exclusively of Georgia products. The Georgia products dinners are an institution created by the Georgia Chamber of Commerce. The Agricul tural Day parade' is in charge of the Atlanta Ad Men’s Club, which is mak ing of it a great state-wide event. Every County Should Be In It Every county in Georgia should par ticipate in the Agricultural Day pa rade. A float upon which may be shown the county's abundant prod ucts can be prepared at comparatively small cost; all agricultural products for exhibition may be shiped to At lanta on any railroad free of cost. Georgia’s counties will compete la A TEXAS WONDER. The Texas Wonder cures kidney and bladder troubles, dissolves gravel, cures diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheumatism, and all irregularities of the kidneys and bladder in Dotn men and women. Regulates bladder troubles in children. If not sold by your druggist will be sent by mail on receipt of SI.OO One small bottle is two months’ treat ment, and seldom ever fails to perfect a cure. Send for testimonials from this and other states. Dr. E. W. Hall, 29*45 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. Sold by druggists. BIG PRIZES FOR COUNTIES IN AGRICULTURAL PARADE Atlanta. October. (Special.) A vast panorama on wheels, made op of scores of floats entered by the differ ent counties of Georgia, and showing the many agricultural products and resources of the state, will be the prin cipal feature of the big parade on Ag ricultural Day of Harvest Festival Week, November 18. Every county in Georgia is being in vited and urged to enter a float in this parade and to compete for the prizes. The first prize, for the best float, is SI,COO, in gold, and there will be other valuable prizes in cash and agricultural implements. But worth thousands of times more than the prizes will be the big advertising" that the counties will get from entering in the parade. In the first place the parade will be seen by nearly half a million people, and in the second it will be shown later all over the Unit ed States in motion picture films. Will Have Big Audience The population of Atlanta and its suburbs is now considerably over 200,- 000, and it is estimated that there will be nearly that many visitors here from other parts of Georgia for Har vest Festival Week. The crowds that will line,the streets for the Agricultu ral Day parade will surpass even PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. I. H. Miller will preach both at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday School at 10 a. m. Dr. O. Lee Chesnutt superintendent. Come. The seats are free. i Leave your orders for Pecan trees with J. A. Joy ner. The finest varieties- Phone 2002 for milk and cream. Delivered at you door every morning. SIOO Reward, SIOO The readers of this paper will be ' pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is j Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only i positive cure now known to the medical ! fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional ; disease, requires a constitutional treat ment. Hali’B Catarrh Cure is taken in - ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, there : by destroying the foundation of the dis ease. and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting i nature in doing its work. The proprietors i have so much faith in its curative pow ! ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars 1 for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. this parade for a first prize of SI,OOO in gold, and other prizes of cash and valuable agricultural implements. Ap pearance in this parade, which will be shown in moving pictures from one end of the United States to the other, will be worth thousands of dollars to each oounty in advertising. It will be seen not only by the 200,000 residents of Atlanta and Fulton county, but by more than 100,000 visitors from Geor gia and all parts of the south. There will be a value in the prizes offered, far beyond their intrinsic worth. County Committees Named Special committees have been ap pointed in every Georgia county to look after county representation in this parade. There is not an enterpris ing county in Georgia but can make a magnificent showing on this occa sion with a combination of its splen did agricultural ~ and domestic prod ucts. Many of tne" counties are now preparing to ship their products to At lanta, and have their floats built and decorated here. They are also arrang ing to distribute attractive literature about their advantages. Information regarding free shipment of agricultural products to Atlanta, or relative to any other feature of Agri cultural Day, will be promptly furnish ed to any county on application to F. (X oars Georgia, How an Engineer Keeps Well Railroad engineers are more ex posed to catching cold than other workers, E. G. Duuaphant of Mon ette. Mo., has mu a Frisco engine 25 yr-rtis and all the medicin- lie lias taken is Folly’s Honey anil Tar He writes: I always keep it in tny house and reccunend it to all who have a bad cough or cold.” —The Owl Pharmacy, adfv. Neatest place in the city The Quality Grocery. 134 the great Shrine convention, which brought more than 100,000 visitors. Agricultural Day will be of strictly state wide significance. It will be a state-wide holiday, so made by the proclamation of the governor, and all the features of the day, in charge of the Ad Men’s Club of Atlanta, will put the counties of the state in the forefront. On that day will occur the parade above described, also the Geor gia Products dinner, and the Agricul tural Day ball at the auditorium arm ory, and in addition the Ad Men are planning to entertain all the editors of the weekly and daily newspapers of the state at a luncheon to be given at one of the prominent local clubs, Should Get Ready Now Every county which wishes to be represented by a float in the parade should communicate direct with P. C. McDuffie, general chairman of Agri cultural Day program, Georgia Har vest Festival Association, Atlanta. The Association has mad£ arrangement with the railroads to ship free of charge all agricultural products to be used in this parade, and each county, to avail itself of this right, has only to communicate with Mr. McDuffie, who will furnish them every possible assistance. There will be no entrance fee or other charge, and the only cost to each county Will be the actual ex pense of fitting up the float. FOR EXCHANGE A Fifteen Thousand Dollar Business in Southwest Georgia, one Large Brick Store, Stock Mdse, Stock, &c. The leading business in this territory. Will stand the closest investigation. Will exchange for a good proposition in Jackson or Butts county. Box No. 52 Calhoun Cos Morgan, Ga. AN APPRECIATION OF MISS LOIS SAUNDERS On the evening of October 15, 1915, at 1:30 o’clock, the death angel visited the home of Mr, and Mrs. T. A. Saunders and took from them their dear sweet daughter, Lois. She was born Mav 15, 1896, age 19 years and 5 months. She professed faith in Christ at the age of 18 and joined the Baptist church, of which she lived a true and con sistent member until her death. Her maidenhood was marked by chastity, industry, modesty and strict morality. She loved and lived in her studies and her school books, and by rapid de velopment she was giving every evidence of being possessed with remarkable talent and unexcelled ambition. She was attractive, sympathetic, loving and kind, carrying with her a welcome for all, and a sweet, cheerful atmos phere followed her presence. When we remember her in her unselfish mood and in all her loveliness, our eyes are filled with tears, and our hearts are pierced with the keenest daggers. After having graduated from Jenkinsburg High School May 1914, she had gone off to G. N. 61. college at Mineageville, to prepare herself for useful wo manhood. She was a member of the Junior class only one month when she was brought home very ill. All that medical skill, kind est attention and tenderest care that could be given would not keep her here with us; for she passed away in two days after she came home from school. ’Tis a sad, solemn and almost unbearable thought to know that the family ties have been broken and yet we must be resigned to the bloom of life, but God loved her best and thought she was too good to live in this sinful world, so he took her to that beautiful home above where no sin or sor row can ever enter and where no farewell tears are ever shed. Some day this vale of sorrow will be lifted and the loved ones will then see why the clouds of sorrow have cast their shadows over them. How sad and deso late everything is without her, but heaven is made more real by her going there. Lois is missed Our Jitney Offer—This and 5c DON’T MISS THIS. Out out this slip, enclose with five cents to Foley & Cos. Chicago, 111., writing your tianie and address clearly. You will I receive in return a trial package con taining Foley’s HoneyandTar Com pound for coughs, colds andcronp. Foley Kidney pills and Foley Ca thartic tablets. The Owl Pharmacy, adv IN FIVE MINUTES! NO INDIGESTION, GAS OR SOUR, ACID STOMACH The moment “Pape’s Dia pepsin’ ’reaches the stom ach all distress goes “Really does’’ put bad stom ach in order—“really does’’ over come indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes—that—just that —makes Pape’s Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat fer ments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, un digested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment “Pape’s Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach all such dis tress vanishes. Its truly aston ishing —almost marvelous, and the joy in its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin will give you a hundred dollars’ worth of satis faction or your druggist hands you your money back. Its worth its weight in gold to men and women who can’t get their stomachs regulated. It be longs in your home—should al ways be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach dur ing the day or night. It’s the quickesj, surest and most harm less stomach regulator in the world. her so much and can't see why she was taken from us just in the sovereign will of Almighty God, for ’tis He that “doeth all things well and bringeth bless ings in disguise.” We all loved by every one, and more especially by the loved ones around the fireside at home. Dear loved ones, some day you will know why she was called away from you so early in life. The funeral services were con ducted from the Jenkinsburg Baptist church by her 'pastor. Rev. Z. E. Barron, assisted by Rev. J. F. Spearman. The in terment was in Jenkinsburg cem etery. The casket is there but the jewel is with God. “The Angel of Death has plucked from our midst, A flower sweet and rare, One that we loved and cherished And tended with loving care. Little did we know this maiden Soon, soon would pass away, But she left us sad and lonely, Life has lost one golden ray. We laid her to rest in the lonely grave, Folded close in death’s embrace. No more shall her home be brightened By her cheerful smiling face. We know we can meet dear Lois, On that Dright and happy shore, And clasp her in our arms Where parting is no more.” One who loved her Mrs. E. A. Cawthon, Jenkinsburg, Ga.