Newspaper Page Text
STATE NEWS
BRIEFLY TOLD
•After every meal
Reynolds.—During a heavy thunder
storm here, lightning struck the bare
of L. T. Ruffin, killing Bobo Williams,
negro farm hand. The barn was set
on fire, but extinguished with little
difficulty.
Mr*. Shaw Calls Lydia E»Pink>
ham'* Vegetable Compound
a God-Send to Sick Women
THE CLAYTON TRIBUNE, CLAYTON. GEORGIA.
Make* the
■ext elgav
task better.
Doing What He Could
Tbe Tastor—Won’t you come to
church today instead of motoring
■round tbe country?
The Reprobate—Sorry, I can’t, par-
m. I tell you what I’ll do—I’ll go
with a friend, and park my car outside
jtmr church, so it’ll look as though
you had somebody inside.—Columbia
Kate. .
A simple, old-fashioned medicine, as good
4asr as In 18S7, is compounded In Wright's
Vegetable Pills. They regulate the
liver »Rd bowels. Adv.
1 Wet Weather Product
In Tndo-Chlna rice is grown under
eery different conditions from those in
America. In Cochin-China there is no
Irrigation; the rice Is plnnted at the
Beginning of the rainy season, and all
•he necessary water is supplied by the
that fall ' continuously during
growing period.
Weak and Miserable?
Is > kune, aching back keeping you
anacrabla? Are you tortured with
ahatp, stabbing pains? Feel weak,
taref—“all-played-out" ? Then look to
year kidneys, for these are common
ef kidney weakness.* There may
he headaches and dizziness, too. Don't
ria serious kidney sickness. Help
year weakened kidneys with Coon's
no*, a stimulant diuretic to the kid
neys. Doan’s have helped thousands
aad should help you. Aik your
smIfkbort
A Georgia Case
STra. J. W. Sutton,
Hill St, Ft
. Oa., says:
-My back was so
lasae I could hardly
■at around and the
Asum stabbing
pains felt as though
lay back were be
ing torn apart Dur
ing the night It
■earned as though
every muscle stlf-
Sansi and I could hardly move. My
fs were disordered, too, and
spells came on. Doan’s Pills
me completely."
DOAN’S ^
STMOLANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
FejtsrMSbam Co. Ml*. Cheat., BuJUlo, N. Y.
ECZEMA
After Others Fail
PETERSON’S OINTMENT
The mighty healing power of Peter-
hob's Ointment when eczema or terrible
•tailing of skin aM scalp tortures you
is known to tens of thousands of peo
ple the country over. »
fw pimples, ucne, rough and red
■kth, ulcers, old sores, piles and all
Memiabcs and eruptions it is supreme
ly efficient, ns any broad-minded drup
elet will tell you.
Avon* impiiii
n stag drags Is
•ns son from AlksI
•last
M brings comforting Kite/
bat Us. all dntcrUi
Roll* Baeksl,gw YortCHj
hell
YES
Dawson.—After a survey of the area
damaged by hall and wind, about five
miles northwest of the city, the ares
of cotton destroyed, or partially so
has been placed at-1,000 to 1,250 acres,
with a loss estimated at from $25,000
to $30,000.
Atlanta.—The American Sugar Re
fining company, of Jersey City, N. J.,
was awarded a Judgment -of 13,867.16
against the Oeorge Moore Ice Cream
company, of Atlaqta, in federal district
court here, in a suit in which the New
Jersey company sought to recover the
sum of $8,206.40 for alleged breach ot
contract cn six counts.
Savannah.—Harmonious in every re
spect was the meeting at the DeSoto
hotel of those arranging -for organi
sation of the Rosin and Tuprentlne Ex
change, a new corporation of naval
stores producers designed to acts as
a buying and selling company of tur
pentines and rosins. About fifty pro
ducers were present.
Atlanta.—Governor Walker has of
fered a reward of $500 for arrest and
conviction of unidentified persons who
attacked the home of J. Wesley Neal,
Forsyth county, on the night of June
15. Several shots were fired by the
attackers, and one of Mr. Neal’s chil
dren was wounded. Officials of the
Blue Ridge Judicial circuit asked the
governor to offer the reward.
Griffin.—Glenn Gulledge, Raymond
Shockley and Bill Rogers, white men
of Spalding county, have been lodged
In the oounty Jail here on warrants
charging'murder following the shoot
ing to death of Penny Westmoreland
and the wounding of her husband, John
Marcus Westmoreland, by a mob late
at night The men deny any connec
tion with the ehootlng, and declare
that they know nothing of the affair.
Fort Gaines.—T. Alexander Edwards
of this city, who Jumped off a cliff on
the Chattahoochee river, died at the
home of his mother, Mrs. B. C. Ed
wards, here. He leaped from a high,
rooky cliff on the Alabama side of the
river, landing on a rock ledge Just
above the water’s edge. He was res
cued by a party of campers and rushed
here for treatment No reason is as-
algned for his act Funeral* services
were held here.
Atlanta.—Buckhead annexation was
tilled for the third and, council lead
ers said, the last time by city councll
at Us special session. The Horace
Russell annexation measure, to incor
porate into the city of Atlanta all the
territory between Howell’e Mill and
Piedmont roads to a point 'beyond
Buckhead, was tabled by a rising vote
of 17 to 8. It was in the form of a
request to the gelieral assembly to
amend the city charter clause fixing
the city limits. -
Sparta.—The northern section of
Hancock county around Harris' mill
was visited by a disastrous storm the
other afternoon. The storm passed
over a strip of land about two miles
long and most of the crops in that
section araftiined. The damage has
been estlnMM at thousands of dol
lars. It lif sKld that other crops will
have to be planted in the territory
visited by the hail, which Is the first
to damage crops here this spring.
Farmers will replant With other crops
besides cotton,
Savannah. — Eleven man-eating
■harks were caught wiih hook and
liner off Warsaw Island in less than
half an hour, according to reports
brought'in by a fishing party, which on
the Gladys, a motorboat, went after
the fish. Included in the party were
H F. Cook, Thunderbolt, owner of
the boat; H. J. McDonald, Joseph
White and Clarence Dabikem. Seven
more were shot and sunk. Mors could
have been taken, but the sport be
came monotonous, members of the
party Stated.
Cambridge, Maine.— 4 ‘I suffered ter
ribly with pains and soreness in my
isides. Each montn
I had’to go to
and the doctor toL
me I simply had to
~ under an opera-
a before I could
get help. I saw your
advertisement in the
paper, and I told my
husband one day to
G t me a bottle ’of
'dia E. Pinkham’s
Veg«
sgetable Com-
EJ pound. Before I took
felt better. I took it
the third dose I ^..
four times a day for two years, getting
better all tbe time, and now for four
yew* I don’t have any pains. After
taking the medicine for two years I had
another child—a lovely baby girl now
four years old—the life of our nome. I
do praise this medicine. It it a Godsend
, -t i« a Godsei _
to women who suffer with female
troubles and especially for pains at the
periods. I surely was very bad once,
and I blow that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound saved me from an
• _
Sylvester.—A coupe bearing a Flor
ida license tag, No. U8659-C, was found
turned over on the 8ylvester-Albany
road about three miles from Sylvester,
Worth county. No one was In the
in the auto-
A worn-
wreck led
'WM
jration.” — Mrs. Josie M. Shaw.
Route No. 1, Cambridge, Maine.
A country-wide canvass of purchasers
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound reports 98 out of every 100 were
Benefited by it. For sale by druggists
everywhere.
Too Busy
“Did you have a good time In town
yesterday, Gap?’’ asked an acquaint
ance.
“Not after I got really to going,” re
plied Gnp Johnson of Rumpus Ridge.
“I sa’ntered around for a spell, and en
joyed It well enough. But when 1
found out there was a sick hoss up an
alley,- a wagonload of fish on a corner
and a big motor car stuck In the mud
out at the edge of town, hurrying, from
one to nnother and traveling round
and round so’s not to miss nuth’n’ of
Importance, it like to have run me
ragged.”—Kansas City Star.
Kill RATS!
Nothing can be more disagreeable
ban a home infested with rats, mice,'cock-
niches, waterbugs, ants,etc., the greatest known
destroyers ol food and property; also carriers of
disease. Kill these peats by using—
STEARNS’
Electric Paste
be standard exterminator lor over 45 years.
It is ready Jor ussi better than traps; and don sol
slow into food lisa powders. Directions in 15
assuages. 35c and *1.50. Money back ii k bik
Sold by all druggists. Refuse substitutes.
He 8. Government Bays It
KEEPma WELL—An Nt Tablet
(a vegetable aperiont) taken et
niabtowtll help keep you well, by
toning and etreogtbetllag your di
gestion and elimination.
Wj
Ufl&K
ChtpsoTF *Hw Old
> M JOWlORS-UMie Mia
One-third the regular doeo, Made
of tbe earns ingredients, then candy
coated. For children and adults.
UNSOLD BY YOUR DKUaaiSTea
Try the New
Ctiticura
Shavind Stick
Freely Lathering
and Emollient
aITCH?
What Our Lawmakers Are
Doing At The
Capital
GOV. CLIFFORD WALKER
ADDRE88E8 A8SEMBLY
Atlanta.—Governor Clifford Walker,
addressing the Joint session of the
general assembly in the house cham
ber, reiterated several of his state
ments and suggestions of his last mes
sage and stressed the question of tax
ation and economy and state admin
istration. He praised the farmers of
Georgia for their fortitude In the hard
Umes Just passing, and predicted the
future would be bright for them.
" governor commended the pres
ent legislature for their stand on econ
omy, referred to the pledge of his ad
ministration for strict economy, and
cited several instances whereby it had
been carried out, making special ref
erences to the suggestions of the new
auditing department.
Governor Walker advocated passage
of the blit to provide biennial sessions
of the legislature, saying “it would
save the state hundreds of thousands
of dollars." He scored “deficiency
appropriations” and "lump sum” bills
of appropriation, and stressed the fie-
. cessity of all financial matters incom
es: and expenditures of the state pass
ing through the state treasury.
The bill to repeal the tax equali
zation law should be placed on the
calendar at once and disposed of, the
governor declared.
He advocated the four-year term for
governor and state house officers -as
of vital importance to the state, and
called attention to the faot that this
bill should not affect the term of the
present governor.
With reference to the absent voters
bill, reforestation and free school
books, the governor approved the legal
ity of the absent voters’ ballot, urged
protection of Georgia’s forests and
favored free textbooks In all her
schools.
The governor urged that the state
oapltol be repaired without delay and
that the ground floor of the building:
be remodeled for offices. He advocated,
the establishment of budgets in all
departments and urged that all state
Institutions make greater efforts to
live within their Incomes.
Enforcement of tax collection was
another feature of the message, which
advocated a more uniform collection
of inheritance taxes through amend
ment of the present statutes.
New 8enate Bills
New bills Introduced In the eenati
were; ' V
By Ficklen, of tho 16th—To amend
section 1671 of the code’of Georgia,
1919, providing that two out of ten
trustees ot Georgia state sanitarium
shall be women.
By Mundy, of the 88th—To amend
charter of olty of Rookmart, providing
for registration of voters, * separate;
lists of white and colored voters, and
defining the term and eligibility of
the mayor and council men of the city.
By Mundy—To amend an act tn j
corporatlng Rookmart school district,
so as to authorize the trustees of saldl
school district to oharge tuition lh the
high school and to take necessary
measures for prevention of diseases
among pupils.
By Carswell, of the 21st—Author
izing trustees of Georgia School of
Technology to Invest certain funds for
construction of a faculty apartment
house. ...
By Keith, of the 86th—To amend
an act approved August 16, 1921, naq-
latlng use of, motor vehicles and motor
cycles upon public streets and high
ways, and to prescribe penalties tor
violation ot same.
By Spence, of the 8th—To repeal
the certified public accountants act of
August 17, 1908, and to re-enaot the
same so as to regulate and control the
practice of accounting in the state.
New House Bills
I
Boner back witnout question
It HUNT'S HALVE (alls In the
treatment of
EINQWO
netting akin dis
SisbasL
me*
or direct
Bills introduced in house were:
By Kirkland of MUler—To amend
charter of olty of Colquitt and tor
other purposes.
By Under of Jeff Davis—To amend
the sohool laws of Haslehurst.
By Fleming of Hancock—To repeal
an act to abolish office of treasurer
of Hancock county and to provide tor
establishment ot such office for coun
ty of Hancock, etc. X.
By Fleming ot Hancock—To pro-
, vide for protection - of sinking funds
and to require investment of such
funds in certain securities.
By Arnold ot Lumpkin—To amend
act incorporating town of Dahlonega
so as to provide tor permanent regis
tration. ’ r .' .
By Jones ot Coweta—Providing tor
suit against todividuf*
; banking busiaoss tor any act
out of such business.
By Boswell—To provide for four
terms of superior court of Greene
county. .•’. - -
Clean Child’s Bowels
“California Fig Syrup” is
Dependable Laxative for
Sick Children
“Hurry, Mother! A teaspoonful of
“California Fig Syrup” now will sweet
en the stomach and thoroughly clean
the little bowels and In a few hours
you have a well, playful child again.
Even If cross, feverish, bilious, con
stipated or full of coldi children love
its pleasant taste. It never cramps
or overacts. Contains no narcotics or
soothing drugs.
Tell your druggist you want only
the genuine “California Fig Syrup"
which has directions for babies and
children of all ages printed on the bot
tle. Mother, you muBt say “Cali
fornia.” Refuse any imitation.
Mattering a Torrent
What Is considered ah Important
engineering triumph 1ms been accom
plished In the Swiss Alps in liumess-
ing, with specially constructed tur
bines, a stream of water flowing at the
rate of 540 feet a second, or more than
six miles u minute, according to Popu
lar Mechanics Magazine. The column
of water has the strength nhd rigidity
of a stpel bar, nnd snch forod that each
of the four 3,000-horsc power units In
the plant Is driven with a stream only
one and three-eighths Inches In diame
ter. To withstand the terrific pressure,
special apparatus hud to be built. The
water is taken from the Lake of Fully
nnd flows through three miles of steel
pipe with a fall of approximately one
mile to reacli the turbines.
Ingratitude
had a quarrel?”
care of her cat while
and when she came
back home she accused me of not feed
ing it enough.”—Detroit Free Press.
St .Joseph’s
LIVER REGULATOR
! /£>/• BLOOD LIVER KIDNEYS
i BIG 35V CAN
TOMATO and CABBAGE PLANTS
Stone end Red Rook tomato; Early Jersey
end Charleston Wekefleld, Succession end
Flat Dutch cabbase; Cabbage Heading. aeor-
gla and Follmer collard; Olant Pascal and
White Plume celery; Big Boston, Iceberg,
New York lettuce: White Bermuda and Prise-
taker onion; kale. Brueael* eproute, beets,
kobl-rebl plants. Parcel poet paid, 140, I0e;
444. 76c; 640. 61.44; 1,444. tf.64. Charges
collect, 1,440, 11.04 ; 6.444, 14.14; 14.000, 66.4S.
Else, full count and delivery guaranteed.
_ _ SUMMERV1LXJK, & C.
D. V, JAMISON, I
Special Notice to the Public
We are now offering on the eaey payment
plan ladles* -end gents' high end tow prided
watches, diamonds, silverware, clocks ef all
kinds, fountain pens, beaded begs, pearls,
gold pocket knives; toilet seta toilet articles,
chineware end jewelry of all klndn All that
we ask Is a email amount down and the bal
ance to be paid weekly. All orders strictly
confidential. Write for price list, also cir
cular. C. V. MONTFQRD. 147* Til
COLLEGE POINT. NHW YORK.
Third Ave.,
r 't.