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Syrup Pepsin
The Perfect Laxative
is an ideal remedy for consti
pation. It is a combination of
simple laxative herbs with pepsin that
acts in an easy, natural manner, and is
as safe for children as it is positively
effective on the strongest constitution.
Sold in Drug Stores Everywhere
50 cts. (a) SI.OO
A trial bottle can be obtained, free of charge, by writing to
Dr. W. 11. Caldwell, 457 Washington St., Monticello, Illinois
CARD OF THANKS
We take this method of thanking
our friends for the many deeds of
kindness and love shown us during
the illness and death of our father.
May God bless each of you with such
friends when you pass through this
great ordeal.
Mrs. Wilson Smith, Sr.
Wilson J. Smith,
O. E. Smith,
Ben L. Smith.
Maybe the fellows who fail to buy
Liberty Bonds are waiting for kaiser
Bill to levy his indemnity.
Comfort and Price
Come Closest Together in This Car
Somewhere between the ex
tremes of Low Price and
Patrician Luxuriousness,
there is a point at which the
qualities of Price and
Comfort come closest
together.
Right there you find
the Dixie Flyer .
This is made possible be
cause purpose to do, facil
ities for doing , and ex
perience in doing , are com
bined in the Dixie Flyer
factory to do their perfect
work.
The result is that you will
find in the Dixie Flyer all the
features of Comfort, Con
venience, and Performance,
you naturally want in your
car, and you will also find
many other desirable features
T. J. HAMMOND, AGENT ft oI X IE M °T° S. .9A*S£ MpANV
$1075 f. o. b. Jackson i LOUISVILLE.KX
m^Kjr
P[X|E
THE JACKSON PROCRESS-ARCUS. JACKSON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, MAYJ^IgIS
Dr. Caldwell’s
A GOOD PROVIDER
Someone had asked Mirandy if her
husband was a good provider, and she
allowed he was, in the following lan
guage.
“He jes’ ain’t nothing else, ma’am.
He gv.ine to git some new furniture
providin’ he gits de money; he gwine
to git de money providin’ he go to
work; he go to work providin’ the job
suits him. I never seen such a provid
in’ man in all mah days.”—Madison
ian.
Keep the home fires burning by
buying Liberty Bonds.
of Style, Elegance and Utility
found only in more expen
sive models. It is a car which
satisfies and gratifies alike
quick response, its ample re
serve power in the sand and
on the hills, its ease of oper
ation, and its riding comfort
on any road.
Compare its graceful lines
and distinctive decoration
with the cars you pass on
country road or fashionable
boulevard —and the Dixie
Flyer wins.
Our new illustrated catalogue
will be sent you. It tells the
complete story.
LET A GOOD MECHANIC
TELL YOU
that to prolong the life of your ma
chine (and possibly your own life)
you should have it thoroughly in
spect ed occasionally.
NVhethci jou are using it to the
limit on the road, or often leave it
idle in the garage, you will need re
pairs. and we are thoroughly com
petent to make them.
Wagner’s Garage.
the particular driver
and the particular
dealer.
See the Dixie Flyer at
your dealers. Drive it.
Know for yourself its
JACKSON SCHOOLS TO
GRADUATE CLASS 26
The graduating exercises of the
Jackson public schools will be held
on the night of Friday, May 17. Hon.
M. L. Brittain, state superintendent
of schools, has been invited to deliver
the address.
Diplomas and certificates will be
awarded to a class of twenty-six,
quite a good record for any school in
a town the size of Jackson. The class
is a strong one, being composed of
boys and girls who have taken high
rank in all forms of school vjork.
The exercises will be short and sim
ple. With the exception of the addres s
i before the graduating class there will
i be formal commencement.
FINCHERVILLE
Mrs. Dave Lunsford and Miss Mad
dox, of Island Shoals, spent Sunday
with Mrs. J. T. Fincher.
Mr. I. H. Maddox, of Elgin, has
been visiting relatives here for several
days.
Mr. W. N. Mitchell, Mis. Alice and
Master Walter Smith, of near Mc-
Donough, spent Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. G. E. Buckalew.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Allen spent
last week-end at Worthville with Mr.
and Mrs. Troy Lofton.
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Johnson and
children, of Worthville, spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. A. U. Maddox.
Miss Mattilu Greene spent Wednes
day afternoon with Misses Ada and
Myrtice Buckalew.
Mr. Cliff Horton spent Sunday af
ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Hor
ton. * Id' tli 1 ‘J||n *3)
Mr. Van Jones was a visitor here
from Jackson Friday afternoon.
Mrs. Walter Allen and Miss Lennie
Mae Allen spent Saturday afternoon
with Miss Myrtice Buckalew.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Allen and chil
dren spent the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Will Allen near McDonough.
Miss Ada Buckalew spent Sunday
with Miss Corine Horton.
Mr. Ira Fincher was over from L. G.
I. for the week-end.
Buy Liberty Bonds
ARMY TERMS EXPLAINED
An army corps is 60,000 men.
An infantry division is 19,000 men.
An infantry brigade is 7,000 men.
A regiment of infantry is 3,600
men.
A battalion is 1,000 men.
A company is 250 men.
A platoon is sixty men.
A corporals squad is eleven men.
A field artillery brigade comprises
1,300 men.
A field artillery has 195 men.
A firing squgid is twenty men.
A supply train has 283 men.
A machine gun battalion has 296
men.
An engineers’ regiment has 1,098
men.
An ambulance company has sixty
six men.
A field hospital has fifty-five men.
A machine attachment has thirteen
men.
A major general leads the field ar
my and also each army corps.
A brigadier general heads each in
fantry brigade.
A colonel heads each regiment.
A lieutenant colonel is next in rank
below a colonel.
A major heads a battalion.
A captain heads a company.
A lieutenant heads a platoon.
A sergeant is next below a lieuten
ant.
OLD FALSE TEETH WANTED
DON’T MATTER IF BROKEN
We pay up to 15 dollars per set. Also
cash for Old Gold, Silver and broken
Jewelry. Check sent by return mail.
Goods held 10 days for sender’s ap
proval of our offer. Mazer’s Tooth
Specialty, Dept. A, 2007 S. sth St.,
Philadelphia. Pa. 5-3-Btp
People who have money and espec
ially those viho have made money out
of the war must give an account of
their stewardship. Invest in Liberty
Bonds and help keep the country safe
for liberty, freedom and the pursuits
of happiness.
SHE GOT GOOD RESULTS
This honest testimony from a wo
man who has suffered should be heed
ed by all afflicted wr.th backache,
rheumatic pains, or any symptom of
kidney and bladder trouble: “I have
got such good results from Foley
Kidney Pills that I sleep much better.
Mrs. Chas. Gray, 270, Sixth st., De
troit, Mich.” The Owl Pharmacy adv
Huy Liberty Bonds
A .or,
Luzianne Coffee set before “a .V
gentleman and a judge of fine coffee.” \\ pC 1 1
A finer hot beverage than good, old * n
Luzianne never existed. I
Luzianne tastes all the way down V
and you say “Set ’em up again.” ; /"f/Mt •
Buy a can of Luzianne Coffee. 1£ \ gjfflgPgwr/-
you can’t honestly say that it’s the
best cup of coffee that ever passed
your lips, tell your grocer you’re not
satisfied and he’ll give you back youc
money on the spot.
Please try Luzianne. You’ll lika
it, you will. In clean, air-tight tins. 09 When It
T. PZlAfflMlß Ragil-
VV COFFEE
Our boys are already in the trench
es. Others are going. Others are
ready to go. Let’s back them up by
furnishing the money, food and am
munition. Buy Liberty Bonds and
show your heart is in the struggle.
A Business Should be
as Big as Its Job
If bigness is of benefit to the
public it should be commended.
The size of a business depends upon the
needs which that business is called upon to
serve. A business should be as big as its
job. You do not drive tacks with a pile
driver—or piles with a tack-hammer.
Swift & Company’s growth has been
the natural and inevitable result of na
tional and international needs.
Large-scale production and distribution
are necessary to convert the live stock of
the W eat into meat and by-products, and
to distribute them over long distances to
the consuming centers of the East and
abroad.
Only an organization like that of Swift &
Company, with its many packing plants, hun
dreds of distributing houses, and thousands
of refrigerator cars, would have been able to
handle the varying seasonal supplies of live
stock and meet the present war emergency
by supplying, without interruption:
• f irat —V* *°ldiers and the Allies
m Europe by shipping as much as 800 car
loads of meat products in a single week!
Second— The cantonments in the United
States.
Third —The retailers upon whom the
American public depends for its daily
supply of meat.
But many people ask—Do producers and
consumers pay too much for the complex
service rendered?
. Everyone, we believe, concedes the effi
ciency of the Swift & Company organization
in performing a big job in a big way at a
minimum of expense.
Swift & Company’s total profit in 1917 was
less than 4 cents on each dollar of sales of
meat and by-products. Elimination of this
profit would have had practically no effect on
live stock and meat prices.
Do you believe that this service can be
rendered for less by any other conceivable
method of organization or operation?
These questions and others are answered fully
and frankly In tha Swift A Company 1918 Year
Book sent free an request.
Address Swift A Compeny, U. S. Yards, Chicago
Any man not absolutely a pauper
can afford t o buy one or more Lib
erty Bonds. The terms of payment
are easy. You will get real satis
faction and pleasure out of helping
the country. Get your name on the
roll of honor.