The Jackson progress-argus. (Jackson, Ga.) 1915-current, November 24, 1916, Image 9

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CanHaMUMk* nit f • A 11 ■ u.nSßiiiMwin * blip a few rnnce Albert smokes into vour system! /■& You’ve heard many an earful about the Prince jfir patented process that cuts out bite and parch and lets yCr smoke your fill without a comeback! Stake your bank roll that /3r it proves out every hour of the day. n \\ Lf Prince Albert has always been sold ¥II ffP fit without coupons or premiums. We IJ I Mli ■ V\ // prefer to give quality! JTVM Imw mi \\ There’s sport smoking a pipe or rolling A M /j your own, but you know that you’ve got A V to have the right tobacco! We tell you /% I HP M I vA hj Prince Albert will bang the doors wide JnUwULrlt M \k * p open for you to come in on a good time ,l 0 14 * | firing up every little so often, without a the national joy smoke H K regret! You’ll feel like your smoke past fcJ k | p- T p^ r ' b een W^ will be sorry you cannot H You swing on this say-so like it was a tip to a thousand-dollar bill! It’s worth that in happi- M ness and contentment to you, to every man fjf I gotten out of a chummy // pip eor a makin’s^^^r |US .-A \S R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. inl'Tnd'li! f 111 BMP A ar™>iF -vs^sssrKß n J IHi ZZ&r / .<ai I ft A IM\ Vi i -fUt. f * I® that the United States Govern ( ’m Ji TO iii'iirJE-W?> meat has granted a patent on the ji i ill 111 link rt\ process by which Prince Albert la ri 1 v.-IVii'iii ~ / X •’jasfsstfssjss'S! Jll X -awiisa&ss 4i| Slpo \ ttsarsn: A Heavy Burden A bad back makes life Mis erable for many Jackson People. A bad back is a heavy burden. ► A burden at night when bedtime conies, Just as bothersome in the morn ing. Ever try Doan’s Kidney Pills for it? Know they are for kidney back ache—and for the kidney ills? If you don’t, some Jackson people do. Read a case of it: W. T. Burk, Oak St., Jackson, says: “Heavy lifting and straining (HIEBVICE HE CURITY I I .gsMßssi ~ r Interest ImABIUTY ““ g | Deposits STOP to consider what ft GOOD BANK ACCOTJI. i IITSTTRES. The business man can employ the best help and insure. SERVICE. De pression may come in his line, but his big CASH ON HAND means BECURITY. The fine line of credits may be drawn tight, but none will question his STABILITY. Give your business SERVICE, SECURITY and STABILITY with your bank deposits. FIRST FARMERS BANK JACKSON, GEORGIA caused my kidneys to get out of or der. The kidney secretions sometimes passed too frequently and were scan ty. They also contained sediment. My back finally commenced to ache and grew worse until I couldn’t keep go ing. I had rheumatic pains all through my body and I was so sore and lame that 1 could hardly get out of the bed. I doctored and tried all sorts of medicine, but with no re sults. I finally used Doan’s Kidney Pills and they soon put my kidneys in good condition. The pains left my back and the kidney secretions pass ed regularly.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Burk had. Foster-Milbum Cos., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. advt. It makes cows fat and healthy, increases flow of milk, quantity and quality of butter, BEET PULP, car load at The Busy Corner. BABY HAD WHOOPING COUGH Mrs. Sam C. Small, Clayton, N. M. writes: “My grandson had whooping cough when he was three months old We used Foley’s Honey and Tar and and I believe it saved his life. He is now big and fat.” Foley’s Honey and Tar is a fine thing to have in the house for whooping cough, croup, colds. The Owl Pharmacy, adv. DR. WATKINS WILL STUDY IN KANSAS CITY COLLE6E Dr. Joel B. Watkins will leave in a few days for Kansas City, Mo., to take a course of lectures in the Kan sas City Veterinary College. He will likely be away about three or four months. Dr. Watkins will probably visit Chicago while away and study in the leading colleges there. Dr. Watkins is one of the best best known veterinarians in Middle Georgia, having for a number of years enjoyed an attractive practice not only in Butts, but in Henry, Jas per, Monroe, Pike and Spaulding counties. He has met with a large measure of success and it is his pur pose in taking lectures in one of the leading veterinary schools in the country to better equip himself for the scientific treatment of all kinds of animal diseases and ailments. Without exception Dr. Watkins’ many friends are interested to know that he is making a success in his chosen profession. BEET PULP The finest cow feed made, increases flow of milk, quan tity and quality of butter. Just unloaded a car load— the price is right. The Busy Corner. DATE FOR THE 1917 REUNION IS SELECTED The dates for the next Reunion of the United Confederate Veterans have been fixed for May 28 to June 2, 1917, inclusive, according to ad vices from H. F. Cary, General Pas senger Agent of the Southern Rail way Company, Washington, D. C., who is chairman of the finance com mittee and a member of the general reunion committe. The meeting will be held in Washington. Reports from all parts of the South indicate that the attendance of the 1917 Reunion will be greater than that of any other meeting ever held in Washington. This will be the first gathering of the veterans at Wash ington, and it is expected that the na tural interest attached alone in a vis it* to the National Capital will swell the large crowds who annually are attracted to the Reunions of the vet erans to a record breaking figure. Preliminary plans of the Reunion, which are now being mapped out by the committeees, provide for an elaborate entertainment of the vet erans with excursions to Gettysburg and other nearby battlefields. It pays to feed your cows Beet Pulp, increases flow of milk, quantity and quality of butter, car load at The Busy Corner. BUZZARD HITS SOLDIERS AND THEY CAN’T KEEP WARM According to letters received in Jackson from members of the Jack son Rifles, it is freezing cold on the border and the boys are hard put to it to keep warm. The cold spell came on unexpectedly, the letters state, and the river is frozen over at the camp. Lieut. W. D. Pope writes that he slept under seven blankets and then didn’t keep any too warm. Which showß that it is right considerably cold in the environs of El Paso. When the troops first reached the border it was hot during the day and cold as blazes at night. In the last Build Up for Wintei Clear out the congestion that has disturbed your breathing and weakened your digestion, and re- T?tsK invigorate all the bodily processes to do their full / n\\ share in cold weather, and thus build yourself up /( I \\ to perfect health. * PERUNA IS INVIGORATION Bt [* a tonic that restores the balance to your bodily function*, clear* way the waste matter in your *ytem, and key* you up to increas- and eiiort and better health. For nearly half a century thousand* Ar ave found it a valuable aid in all catarrhal condition*.. Their Xr \n xperienco point* the way for you. PKItUNA ha* stood the /r ft ft/Jf! nt that proyaa it* value. Tablet form is convenient for /ty / uick administration. Fleaaaat to take and ea*y to carry //jr Mm/r // dth you. //j jjffy > Msnalin Tablet* are the ideal laxative. They correct /// &/'//,/j he habit of constipation, arouse the liver and help the //jf M Af. fff'y idneya. Your druggist ha* them. j The Peruna Company, Columbus, Ohio jM'y J MISS BREWER NOW WELL AND HAPPY Fell Off Until She Only Weighed 98 Pounds. Gains 15 Lbs. on Tanlac “I firmly believe that if it hadn’t been for Tanlac I would be in my grave today,” was the remarkable statement made last Monday by Miss Ethel Brewer at her home, 211 Pearl Street, Chattanooga. Miss Brewer’s father called at the Live & Let Live Drug Cos. last Saturday and request ed the Tanlac representative to call at his home and get his daughter’s statement. “I am glad that you have called,” Miss Brewer told the Tanlac repre sentative as he entered the door, ‘‘be cause I want my statement to go in the papers so everybody will know what Tanlac did for me and what a. wonderful medicine it is. “I suffered terribly with stomach trouble and indigestion and for some time a little milk and the white of eggs was all I could eat. I would of ten have vomiting spells and the pains in my stomach caused by the forming of gas was something awful. I tried everything in the way of medicines, but nothing did me any good, and I just kept getting worse all the time. Finally the doctors told me I had Pel lagra, and I was under treatment for four months. My arms and hands were all broken out and my skin be gan to peel off. 1 lost weight and strength until I could hardly get | about and only weighed ninety-eight pounds. This is the very shape I was* in when I began taking Tanlac. “I started taking Tanlac determin-* ed that it would help me, and I amj happy to say that it has done thatj and even more. 1 have finished my fourth bottle and the results have! been simply wonderful. My hands' and arms have healed up entirely and the pains in my stomach have disappeared. I sleep better and am, not nervous like I used to be. Myj cheeks are rosy and I feel well and 1 strong in every way. I now weigh! one hundred and thirteen (113)'; pounds, which is fifteen (15) | pounds more than 1 weighed when I! began taking Tanlac. j ‘‘l don’t have to live on milk and j eggs now, but eat such thipgs as meat and vegetables of all kindß—in fact, agrees with me and seems to give me . strength instead of making me sick 1 like it used to. “Tanlac is the finest medicine in • the world and I had no idea there ' was anything that would do me so ! much good in such a short length of . time. Yes, sir,you may put my state- ' ment in the paper if you want to, for , I want to do my part towards letting * the world know about this wonderful ! medicine.” • “Yes, it’s just wonderful the way j this medicine has changed her,” { said Miss Brewer’s father, who had ' joined in the conversation, “and no I one is more happier over it than my self. She has had a world of suffer- j ing to go through, and I have been , very uneasy about her. Her sickness ' has cost me many a dollar, too, and I am mighty glad she found out , about Tanlac when she did.” J Tanlac is sold by Slaton Drug Cos., j in Jackson, and Dr. A. F. White inf Flovilla, Moore & Cos., at Cork, J. E.J & W. R. Kitchens, Fincherville, Ga. J advt. \* few days, however, the thermometer j has taken a sudden drop and it is J cold both day and night. Along with cold rigors and frost bites, the soldiers are getting some S valuable experience on the border, j