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THE CLAYTON^
BUNE. CLAYTON, GEORGIA.
This Is Vital to Every Owner
OF A
Maxwell-Briscoe MotorCar
Made at Tarrytown, N. Y. and
New Castle, Ind., 1905 to 1913
Also to all Owners of Stoddard-Dayton, 1905 to 1914 j
Columbia Gasoline and Electrics, 1906 to 1914;
Everitt Cars of Any Model; Brush,
Sampson and Courier Cars
\
THERE ARE THREE
GOOD REASONS why
you should have your car
overhauled now and worn
parts replaced.
THE MAXWELL MOTOR
COMPANY DID. We
considered it good business,
even if not a moral or
legal obligation.
FIRST: The garage man
can give you better service
—and you can spare the
car better now than later.
No matter whether you are
going to keep the car, or
sell or trade it in on a new
one—it' will pay you well
to Have it thoroughly over
hauled, worn parts replaced
by new ones and body re
painted.
WE F^QUND 122,000 owners
out in the cold, as it were
—pleading for parts. Then;
cars laid up and useless in
most cases.
SECOND: We are able to
furnish replacement parts
for all models of above
makes of cars within 48
hours from receipt of or
der. Have concentrated
this branch of the business
at Newcastle, Ind. (center
of population of the U. S.)
Here we have a $1,750,000
investment in plant and
stock. 45,000 separate bins
of parts.
WE’VE INVESTED about
one and three-quarters mil
lions ($1,750,000) dollars in
a plant and stock of parts,
for over 150 different mod
els, made by the concerns
that comprised the United
States Motor Company,
whose assets we purchased
from the Receiver thru
the U. S. Courts.
WE TOOK THE NAME
MAXWELL solely for the
protection of 60,000 persons
who had bought cars under
that name.
THIRD: And perhaps the
best rdhson why you should
secure your requirements
now—we must increase
prices 20% January 1st,
when the new parts price
lists will be off the i
HAD WE CHOSEN AN
OTHER NAME those 60,-
000 cars would have had
almost no value in the sec
ond-hand market. As it is,
they have a definite value.
And by the replacement of
the wprn parts your car
will be good for a long time
to come.
presses.
NOW NOTE tHIS—Never
before in the history of this
industry has a new con
cern, having bpught the
plants and assets of a bank
rupt one, taken upon itself
the obligation of furnishing
replacement parts for the
cars it never made.
ANY REC O G N I Z E D
DEALER or repair man—
whether he handles the
present Maxwell line or not
—can procure these parts
for you. Or you can order
direct. Shipment will be
made within 24 to 48 hours
after receipt of the order at
Newcastle.
Wrlto for our booklet, “Tlotr
to Make Your Car Live Twice
Afl Long.” In which wo set
forth tbo Maxwell policy to
ward owners of ttio above
mentioned cars. Address
Maxwell Motor Co., Inc.
1003 Woodward Avenue
DETROIT, MICH.
Note: For quicker service those living East of the Alleghejiies can order
from Maxwell Motor New York Co., 13th East Ave., Long Island
City. From the Alleghenies to the Rockies, order direct from Max
well Motor Newcastle Co., Newcastle, Ind. tVest of the Rockies,
order from Maxwell Motor Sales Corporation, 6p5 Golden Gate Ave.,
San Francisco\
Womanlike.
Ethel (Impatiently) — Oh. why
doesn't Billy come; he's kept me wait
ing a whole halt hour.
Her Brother—I always told you that
fellow had effeminate traits.
Very Much So.
■"Have they the ground rent system
out where you are?”
"I should say so! Three earth
quakes In six weeks.”
Pain in Back and Rheumatism
are the daily torment of thousands. 'To ef
fectually cure these troubles you must re
move the cause. Foley Kidney Pills begin
to work for you from the first dose, and ex
ert so direct and beneficial an action in the
kidneys and bladder that the pain and tor
ment of kidney trouble soon disappears.
Processes for the recovery of com
bustible material remaining in coal
ashes are engaging the atteiltton of
several German chemists.
COLDS & LaQRIPPE
5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case
of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrlppe;
It acts on the liver better than Calo
mel and does not gripe or sicken.
Price 25c.—Adv.
Nearly 650,000 women are employed
in the factories of Russia.
f^ore Eyes, Granulated Eyelids and Sties
promptly healed with Roman Eye Bal
sam. Adv.
Some men are so sensitive that they
would rather have you shoot at them
than laugh at them.
A GENERAL IONIC - TAKE GROVES
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally
Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver,
Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up
the Whole System. For Grown People and Children.
Ton know -what you are taking when you take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic
as the formula is printed on every label showing that it contains the well known
tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter
tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It his no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing
Mothers and Pals, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness without purging
Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arouses the liver to action and
purifies the blood. A True Tonic and sure appetizer. A Complete Strengtbener.
No family should be without iL Guaranteed by your Druggist Ws mean it joc.
FOUR SPECIAL DISHES
SELECTED RECIPES THAT ARE OP
MERIT.
Mushrooms With Eggs Always Appre
ciated—Salmi of Lamb a General
Favorite—Stewed Plums
Excellent Dessert.
Mushrooms With EggB—Break a
dozen fresh mushrooms and put them
into a stewpan with a tablespoonful of
butter, one-quarter of a teaspoonful of
salt, pepper to taste and a few drops
of lemon Juice. Cover the pan and
simmer slowly for ten minutes. Then
add one cupful of cream and a little
chicken or veal stock, and cook slowly
until the mixture begins to thicken a
little. Then stir In six eggs well
beaten and stir until the whole 1b of
the consistency of scrambled eggs.
Serve on well-browned toast.
Salmi of Lamb—Cook one table
spoonful of butter with one-half table
spoonful of finely chopped onion five
minutes. Add 1% tablespoonfuls of
flour and cook until well browned.
Pour on gradually one cupful of stock
and season with one-fourth of a tea
spoonful of pepper and one teaepoonful
of walnut catchup. Reheat slices of
cold roast lamb In sauce, arrange on a
hot platter, having slices overlap one
another, and pour sauce over meat.
Union Cake—Two cups sugar, one
cup of sweet milk, one cup of butter,
three cups of flour, one-half cup of
cornstarch, four eggs, three level tea-
spoonfuls of .baking powder, one-half
teaspoonful of ground mace. Rub but
ter, sugar and eggs together, rubbing
one egg In at a time; sift In the corn
starch and one cup of flour and the
milk alternately. Lastly the two cups
of flour and the baking powder. Bake
In a large pan In a moderate oven,
with a paper cap over the top till It’s
half done.
Stewed Plums—Wipe each plum
with a soft, damp cloth and prick It
wit.h,a fork to prevent bursting. Have
the water in the preserving kettle a
little more than lukewarm and gently
lay the fruit In It. Bring to a gentle
boil; cook just long enough for the
plums to become tender, but not long
enoggh for the skins to crack. Th£y
must be watched carefully. Remove
to a deep dish, add a cup of granulated
sugar to every quart of liquor, boil to
a syrup and pour over the plums.
ASKING ALMOST TOO MUCH
Strong Probability That Jack Podger
Declined the Service He Was
Asked to Do.
Jack Podger was tha most obliging
man that ever lived. His services
were given gratis to all applicants.
He could mend a clock, repair a punc
ture, drown a kitten, paper a wall,
and, In fact, perform any operation
known to mortal man. In conse
quence Jack’s services were in con
stant demand.
A week or two ago after cobbling
a neighbor's hoots, lancing his cou
sin’s gumboil, sweeping the vicar's
chimney and writihg a testimonial
for his charwoman's nephew, he re
tired to rest. He was wakened by a
terrific bang at his front door, and
Immediately rushed to the window.
“What’s the matter?” he bawled
Irritably.
"You’ll excuse me for troubling you
at this time of night,” came the reply,
“but the fact Is, our baby is so very
cross, and we would like you to come
and pacify him. He always laughs
when he sees your funny nose.”
His Business.
you think Jones
could be
“Do
spared at a pinch?”
“Of cdurse not. He’s a policeman."
Hamilton, Canada, has a union com
posed of women bookkeepers.
Backache Warns You
Backache is one of Nature's warnings
of kidney weakness. Kidney disease
kills thousands every year.
Don't neglect a bad back. If your back
is lame—if it hurts to stoop or lift—if
there is irregularity of the secretions—
susppet your kidneys. If you suffer head
aches, dizziness and are'tired, nervous
and worn-out, you have further proof.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, a fine rem
edy for bad backs and weak kidneys.
A Maine Case
1 R-'-r;/
Picture
Tells
Story
Mrs. J. IT. Ben
nett, 59 Fountain
St., Gardiner, Me.,
Bays: "I was In
bed four months
with kidney trou
ble. My back felt
ns though it was
broken. My body
bloated and I
could hardly see,
Five doctors failed
to help me. When
I had given up
hope. I began tak
ing Doan’s Kidney
Pills. I was cured
and now I weigh
much more and
am strong and
healthy.**
^ in 15to26 days. Trial treatmen t bodt Fret
> Dr. THOMAS E. GREEN, Successor to
Dr. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
HELP WANTED—$3 A DAY. Home work.
No canvassing. Male or female. Ktamp secures
territory. Michigan 8pee. Co., Kf,.IolinH. Mich.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Venison Steaks and Hash.
To hash cold venison, cut the meat
In nice, small slices and put the
trimmings and bones into a saucepan
with barely water enough to cover
them. Let them stew for an hour,
then strain In liquid Into a stew pan,
add to It some bits of butter, rolled
In flour, and whatever gravy was left
of the venison the day before. Stir
in some currRnt jelly and lot it boil
up, then put in the meat^nd keep it
over the Are just long enough to
warm through, but do not allow It to
boll, as It has been once cooked al
ready.
Venison Steaks—Cut them from the
neck or haunch. Season them with
pepper and salt. When the gridiron
haB been well heated qver a bed of
bright coals, grease the bars and lay
the steaks upon it. Broil them well,
turn them once and take care to save
/as much of the gravy as possible.
Serve them with some currant jelly
laid on each steak. Have your plates
warm.
White Cake.
Into a dish put one cup of sugar
and ono and one-half cups of flour
sifted with one rounding teaspoon of
baking powder. Into a measuring cup
put the whites of two eggs, add but
ter till the cup is half full and then
fill It full of sweet milk. Beat five
minutes and bake In a loaf tin in a
moderate oven. I frost it with the
two yolks beaten, then add confec
tioners’ sugar and a little vanilla till
thick enough to spread.
Our Favorite Cake.
One-half cup butter, one and one-
half cups sugar well creamed togeth
er. Add the yqlks of "three eggs, two-
thirds of a cup of milk, two cups flour,
one and one-half teaspoops baking
powder. Beat all together, then add,
folding In. the whites of three eggs
beaten stiff. Frost with cooked choco
late frosting, made pa follows: Two
cups powdered su
feoll until It
spoons of cocoa L,
powdered sugar w|j
water to blend, is
one cap milk,
add two tea-
two teaspoons of
just enough hot
Baked Onlo ;|
Peel. and pari |
onions; drain; Cj
spoons butter;
flour, one-quarts
In Ramekins.
| 12 medium sized
J Melt two table-
'. two tablespoons
aspoon salt, ofle
and one-quarter ips cream, four
tablespoons soft ; -end crumbs, one
tablespoon chopp4 umileyv Boll five
minutes, add one; < slightly beaten
and the chopped t-;Jbna Cool slight
ly, add white# of ofo eggs, beaten
stiff—more seasotnnjj: If needed. Bake
In buttered rarnek
Serve Immediately.
minutes.
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT
AVegetable Preparation for As -
similating the Food and Regula
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
Promotes Digpslion,Cheerful
ness and Rest.Con tains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic
Recipe of Old DrSAffVfl fffOPER
JKunpltln Stud -
Mx Senna •
Roth tile Softs -
Anitt Seed *
ftapermutf -
OlLnrhuut fofed* »
W&rm Seed -
Clarified Jktfde
Winbtryrttn flavor.
A perfect Remedy forConstipa-
lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss of Sleep
Fac Simile Signature of
Tin Cehtaur Company.
NEW YORK.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
At6 month* old
35 Doses - JjCem>
Guaranteed under the Foodaij
Exact Copy of Wrapper. '
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
Fortify
Your Fertilizer
Did you zee your fertilizer dealer and
arrange to buy fertilizer containing at least
as much
POTASH
as Phosphoric Acid ? That is the real kind that pays you and the
dealer. If you did not, you should at once ask your dealer to carry
Potash Saits so that you may increase the Potash in the ordinary
brands. To increase the Potash I percent, add 40 pounds Muriate
or Sulphate of Potash to a ton of goods. A 200-pound bag will
increase the Potash of a ton 5 percent.
Try it once and see how Potash Pays.
If your dealer will not carry Potash Salts, write us for Prices. We -will sell any Quantity
from one 200-pound bag up.
GERMAN KALI WORKS, Inc, 42 Broadway, New York
Chicago, McCormick Block New Orleans, Whitney Central Bank Bid*. Atlanta, Empire Bid*.
San Franciaco. 25 California Stret* Sarannah. Bank A Trust Bldf.
That Jar of MUSTEROLE
On the Bath-Room Shelf
It’s relieved pain for nearly everyone
in the family. When little Susie had
the croup, when Johnny got his feet
wet and'caught cold,
when father sprained
his knee, when Gran
ny’s rheumatism
bothered her—
That jarof MUSTER
OLE was right there to
-give relief and comfort.
MUSTEROLE is a clean, white oint
ment, made with oil of mustard. It
will not blister like a mustard plaster.
Quick relief for Sore Throat, Bronchi
tis, Tonsflitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asth
ma, Neuralgia, Headache, Congestion,
Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Paius
and Aches of the Back or Joints,
Sprains, Sore Muscles, Bruises, Chil
blains, Frosted Feet, Colds on the Chest
(it prevents Pneumonia). Nothing like
MUSTEROLE for croupy children.
In 25c and 50c jars, and a special
large hospital size for
$2.50. -
Accept no substi
tute.
If your druggist can
not supply you, send
25c or 50c to the MUS-
TEROLE Company,
Cleveland, Ohio, and we will mail you
a jar, postage prepaid. Wt
S. J. Bdcbaham, LowellvIUe, Ohio., says:
“We have been using Muaterole for two or
three years past and find It very good. It l*
always In our medicine cupboard.”
... . . ■, .