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i ' ! TBE TIFTON GAZETT®
Published Weekly
' , ' Entered at the Postoffice at Tifton, Georgia,
Second Class Matter, Act of March 3, 1870.
r J. L Herring Editor and Manager.
Official Organ City of Tifton
and Tift County, Georgia.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Twelve Months $1.50
! Six Months 75
ifc. Four Months 50
THE CULMINATION OF THE GREAT PLAN.
Men and women ot this generation should go
down on their knees daily to give thanks that
4 the Supreme Ruler permitted them to live in
•/ the day that saw the. fruition of His Great Plan
for the freedom of the race, the liberation of
Humanity and the setting up of the principles
of Justice to AH Men for the government of
the world.
It was for this that the Father sent his Son
to suffer and die; it was for this that martyrs
went to the cross and to the stake or suffered
in public or died in prison through »i twenty
centuries; it was for this that Columbus was
born, taught and guided; that Franklin lived;
SATURDAY NIGHT.
Working the Road in the Old Day*.
With the passing of the graded, sand-clay
road and the coming of the paved highway, one
finds realization difficult that only one short
span of life has seen the change from the roads
of the old days and their system of upkeep.
Public roads in Georgia were maintained, up
to about twenty years ago, under what we are
told was an old English custom, of each com
munity keeping up its own highways. The roads
in each militia district were proportioned
among the men above sixteen and under
fifty-five years of age living the nearest
to them, and were worked under an over
seer appointed by the Ordinary or, where
such bodies existed, by the County Commis
sioners of Roads and Revenues. The overseer
had arbitrary powers, similar to those of a mili
tary officer, but these powers were rarely used.
The semi-annual “road working,” which
as a rule preceded the sessions of the Superior
Court and the convening of the Grand Jury
were usually occasions of community gather
ings, interchange of gossip, a few fist fights to
clear off the accumulated grudges of the inter
vening months, a picnic dinner—and just a lit
tle work.
Road hands were summoned to appear with
hoe or axe as the overseer directed, and in later
thdt Washington and Lincoln and Lee each fill
ed their part; that Woodrow Wilson was ! years one of the men summoned was al-
brought into the world .trained and inspired. I lowed to send in his stead a horse or mule and
For this Great Day men died that principles ’plow. The roads were largely three-path
might be taught; great continents were dis- trails through the wiregrass and pine forest , al-
covered and populated; people educated and
prepared, that the seeds of Human Liberty
I might fall on fallow soil.
£y,"' When everything was ready, the clarion of
r Fate was sounded ,and a world, bleeding for
four years from the ravages of war, found it
self. Again men saw the white light that blazes
from the sacred jewel on Duty’s brow and went
through the fires of hell and endured the tor-
f- ments of the damned that the world might be
«T redeemed.
' And at last, when the plan was complete,
the - Day of Salvation dawned.
y Blessed mortals we, who were privileged to
f _ live in that Day and to do our part toward car-
;! rying out the Great Ruler’s Plan.
Blessed the Day, that sees the coming of the
. Lord of Hosts, who holds in his hands the
|P Peace of the World. Fit emblem of that fu-
£ ture day when the dead shall be resurrected
and death shall come no more.
« , Blessed they who have suffered or died in the
IpvaUse,'for they have carried the banner of
Liberty for Mankind to the Altar of Sacrifice,
R before the Ark of the Covenant,
i. , Throughout the ages to come, the past four
years with their culmination now will go down
t into history as the epoch that saw the remak
ing and the redemption of Mankind.
Did you have a part in this great work? Did
b you arise, to the call of Duty and measure to
j the full the status of the Patriot and the Citi-
gen? Your posterity, in that future day when
they read history, will ask what their ancestor
cl flid? Will the answer be one of which you
will not be ashamed?
AMERICAN BRAINS—AMERICAN DARING.
Crossing the seas in an airship is an epoch—
one that will go down in time with the first use
of steam, of electricity—or 1 more applicable, the
voyages of Columbus. And it was American
most unbroken otherwise. The work consisted
UNFEIGNED FAITH
UlM too often In the modern drawing CALOMEL SALIVATES Iw A,
«*•*”*. U ? m W» . AND MAKES IOD SICK £0
fn tbe
which Acta like drnamlte on n olnrtlsh Brer
'disport and you lose a day-, wniv
of the finer There'o no reason why a person should
It was not born toko oickenlng. unvoting calomel when
that con brook a few cents buys a large bottle of Dod-
' Wn IA — — a perfect substltnto
the baser
themselves- to the
sentiments of
of’ijnEgfitJ ...
no restraint S’o, their faith came down son’a Liver Tom
from heaven. They read it from tbe in- for calomel,
aplired word of Ood, they •beard it from It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which
pious exbortatious at church, it was horn will start your liver just as surely as
Subject for Eloquent Sermon by Rev. C.
IV. Durden at First Baptist Church
on "Mothers’ Day."
"Having been reminded of tbe un
feigned faith which dwelt first
in thy grandmother Lola, and thy moth
er Fnnlre "—9 'Tim 1 .K >“ uu " 'suoriouuus oi cuun.il, ii wus uoru will /our uver just u surely U nnwent*
M . ’ . ‘ _ ’*7 of the discipline of the soul, and made it* calomel, but it doesn’t moke you sick t
rr!Jf‘n Ur ^"L^“,r. 0di, “ 1 known through conscious and living and c.n not ulivote. - "
J . B ^uupfion in ri le touch with Jesus Christ the Son of Ood. Children and grown folks con toko strict
world After eon. of cycle, cataclysms,', t pr(Kluct of pr>yfr holy Dmtoon’o Liver Tone, becouu i*|. ^ °< O* '
U.T’?" 1 ? ■'“T*,'meditation from which come such eon. fectly haute * " It 1
. JLi ki i fi ^ k !?n d °T, and repose of soul that all life Calomel ia a dangerous drug. It la •» he had no I
, rTu. u ' ‘‘‘“V'VU, filled With joyous hope. Many of mercury and .tuck, your tT‘. T.k^lug, but no do,
erentures In ihc .'nnol t i !f d ° mS ol them did not hove the time and leisure o dose of nasty calomel today and you 1 delightful ocea_
I* led time come WB TbeJr roae th , will feel weak, slek and n.u«“«! £ I mZlZ 7 ®
ceive the riches 0^1 Uem,.”"* ° ”'|" wc|,t thf flo ? r ’ made the bed cooked the morrow Don't low a day’s work. Tak.| Khoo , know hi. devotton to it
. a * Whitman tfMM j at t |, p K pinoiog wheel, or sat ut the No more biliousness, constipation, slug-1f e *f B m ** c ** ® aucceaa. In £act, L— s
s nspir o ng. ^ | old loom, toiling like galley-slaves to gishuesa, headache, coated tongue orj^ preaent efficiency would
“Immense have been the preparations clothe the family. Sometimes they went sour stomach. Your druggist says If I *M>t hare been possible. Such is bis feel*'.
for me, |to the fln <| took their place beside the you don’t find Dodson’s Liver Tone acta
Faithful and friendly the arras that' husband, and was not ashamed of the row better than horrible calomel your money
have helped me, I they made. Then prepared the mid-day is waiting for you. —adv.
Cycles ferried my cradle, rowing and meal, and again bowed themselves to the
rowing like cheerful boatmen, | afternoon tasks. In addition to all these
For room to me stare kept in their things found time to attend to all baby’s
own rings, | needs. And through it all kept sweet and
They sent influence to look after what happy, hopeful and joyous.
or acquired endowments, is a miserable
failure. You can find that life with God
only through Jesus Christ. There is no
other
given under heaven among
t to bold i
Then came the days when sorrows, deep
All forces have been steadily employed • bIa(ll ,. r „ saM j ber patbwa y t ' wh en
to complete and delight
ery messenger brought only evil tid-
In Sdditiou to these cosmic prepara-, ings, when every fountain sent forth only
tious Nature has lent further her gifts bitter water, and all the waves aud bil-
to enrich man since he came upon this lows went over her. We saw her stand-
planet, putting at bis disposal all her ing in the midst of life unperturbed, her
forces, unlocking her vast storehouse ofjfuith utidimined, with hope as cheery as
secrets, both in the heavens and on a morning whose sky kuows no cloud,
eurth. so that he may walk the earth, fly j with the lovcligbt still bright iu her eyes,
air and sail the sea master of all and music ‘ :M u "“
things. With these gifts of Nature, and Yo
largely of cutting out the logs that had fallen !hj ' th,! ,uitio11 «f patience and industry if j
,« a ... jv a • v . sji*. _ man has learned to so cooperate with v«u could have listened
across the road since the last working; filling , Vature tbat labor t . ea ‘ 8C(1 to bc i,„ v
up little gullies which winter rains had washed I wearisome, the drudgery of former times
it could have been so?
•uld have looked into her soul, if
iild have listened to the old song
r kneel-
by her
along the wagon trails on the hillsides and' 110 " become ll ' li * l,t,ul "-creation, the'out her |.™ye
; toll of one may feed a thousand, and two you would kirn
may bountifully supply ten thousands. | was living the
Resides these things the evolution of Christ Jesus
ini forces has wrought to add
advantages to Nature’s original endow
ment. The mind has gathered through
building “bulkheads” to “turn the water out of
the road.” These la9t were monstrosities form
ed by laying a pine pole diagonally across the
road and covering it with soil. There it re
mained for six months or a year, giving each unceasing toil from every field of
passing team a heavy pull and every vehicle aj ,l ™ vor “ l " 1 " tor " 1 “P in book *> > ,ut
nastybump. |™"J
Five or six miles of road were usually worked' felt,
by noon, and the dinner brought in tin pails or I 1 ’"
baskets was eaten on the grass beneath the
pines by some convenient spring before the par
ty of a dozen or a score of men separated for
the. long walk home. It was during the noon
rest and picnic that the jokes cracked during
the day bore fruit, the politics of the coming
county election were discussed or the fights
which had been brewing for many weeks were
pulled off.
When a new road was to be opened, the af-
; faith ’
Unit
n- bad the
fair was entirely different. The entire militia
district was called out and as these districts
were usually large, the gathering represented
several hundred men, many of them coming a
considerable distance by horseback. The Ordi
nary or Chairman of the Board of County Com
missioners was on hand to direct operations,
each gang of hands being under the personal
direction of its own road overseer, who in turn
received instructions from the county officer.
There was no play this time. Nearly every
man carried an axe, and it had been sharpened
to a razor-edge for business. Cutting a swath
forty-feet wide through the forest was no mean
task, and each went at it with a will to get it
done before nightfall, to avoid having to return
next day. There was friendly rivalry between j
the different gangs of hands, and soon the axes | l
of each squad were ringing, interrupted at inter-1 have a rich heritage in your birth, you
ImmI at night, pouring
i' of thankKgiving to God,
w tin* Kocret of it all. She
overcoming life of God in
her Lord. Her unfeigned
tee ret of her blenned life,
mothers were the greatest
rer lived on earth. They
noblest ideals of life. They
tnnkers and home keepers.
:, released from stone, and deposit-' Loving the habiliments of modesty they
museum nil the best the race has'would have scorned the suggestion of the
eon, or spoken until the world has cheap political agitator of our time that
e one vast thesaurus to bo owned j women must swagger in the streets among
and enjoyed by every man aud woman nihilists and cheer on murderous anar-
coming into the world. chists in order to obtain the ballot. They
Chief amoug life’s assets I am bound neither care for nor sought masculine
to put religion. Above nil the gifts of prerogatives.! They Aet themselves against
Nature, above all acquired estate, above this black tide of modern vulgarism,
all other inherited tendencies and above) whose frothing waters are seeking to
all other endowments bequeathed to us inundute all society and destroy sweet
by our parents, is the Fuith that binds us'modesty the seamless garment of woman-
to our Creator. hood.They kept the snored fire a flame on
To be well born is to be set well on the ultnr of home, once kindled by Hes-
life’s way. Happy thy child that is J tia among the Greeks and Vesta nmnng
nourished by n noble and religious par- the Romans. With womanly virtue they
' ught to keep golden the days of ehival-
whon the crested Knight
men whereby you can be saved.
Our mothers believed in this Savior
and we may believe iu Him too. Then
coine to Him us tbe mothers of old came,
serve Him iu the spirt they served. Let a
steadfast and heroic perseverance hold
you to this sacred and divine way and
you will find all living glorious! And
as the days measure your allotted time
on earth you will find life sweeter, both
in retrospection and in prosjiection. The
past will lie behind yon like a placid
lake amid the hills of memory, while the
future will call to fields of corn and wine
and never ending delight.
I have read the traveller’s and poet's
deM-ription of India's Taj Mnhl, tbat
wonderful creation of dreaming genius
in which the deft hand has wrought taj
delicate and exquisite outlines and sym-
nble to n pious and godly life. Young
Timothy had little to bonst of In the way
of patrimony, or what the world .1*
pleased to call “aristocracy of descent,”
but being the son of good Eunice, and
the grandson of pious Lois he could
sing:
“My boast is ii«»t, that I deduce my
birth
From loins enthroned and rulers of
the earth;
Rut higher fnr my proud pretensions
The son of parents passed into the
skies."
It was refreshing to the apostle to re
call the faith of these Godly women, and
to remind the young minister of his holy
partenage. Paul would seem to say:
"Yours is no mean parentage, you are the
son of Eunice, and the grandson
of the
untcl it glory to spliotor hi-lonce in and lay at my feet like
defense of womans tanor^Tho^bulitl ^ <iau( ( . bnd , ahnn](d of ita tlUnlc
pranks; ami I said this ii sublime and
grand!
1 have looked into the starry heavens
ing toward the seboool that those who
know him best feel sure that no tribute
could have come from a source that he
would have appreciated more.
At the close of the exercises, Prof.
Lewis Introduced Prof. J. H. Breed
love, who made the presentartra address.
When tbe grounds and buildings of the
Second District Agricultural School were
dedicated to education, and when the
plow, the hoe, the cook-stove and the
dish-rag were put into a school course
in Georgia, it was a great risk, Hr.
Breedlove said.
“Looking back ten years it is hard to
realize how the venture could have
been a business succcess. But results
shown today prove that the builders
did not build in vain. The men who
builded then built not for money, not
for politics, but through pure philan
thropy and far-sightedness. They are re
paid by seeing their efforts rewarded
by results. Students leaving here have
a deep sense of gratitude. They return
inctr.v all the lights and shadows of! at every opportunity; they love the
earth and sky, anil I thought what glo-| t h e school and the things it stands for.
rinus conception, what divine realiza- j rphey are loyal to it and to ita founders
tioD • , , , . . - _ I and they want to express their«love tnd
I have stood beneath the fretted domei , .. 4
, ,, . T .. . . ... . appreciation to the man who chiefly made
of the Congressional Library at Wash- , *
ington. nml walked down the corridor of 11 P° M,ble -
the Corcoran Art Gallery, and gazed “The faculty and 170 of the present
upon some Master-piece through whose and former students of the school pres-
tinted hues and blending light the genius ent you this loving cup, brim full of
of the Artist shone, and my soul was so'good wishes.”
enraptured and so sublimated that 11 Tjft arose and in a voice choking
sea reel)* knew whether I was in the flesh. w jth emotion said that he could not in
or out of it, and I thought, O, man, won j 8 eX p reS s his feelings and grateful
glorious is t y "°r • . appreciation. But his face showed this
I have stood and looked upon thei "
iircnn : b.hel.1 her whit, copped waves,^‘er than word, could have told,
leaping and disporting themselves like CU P wa ® ® n * rave< * :
jpiinboliug iambs iu some boundless men-1 "To Capt. H H Tift, from the Faculty
dow; heard the pounding of its thunder- and Alumnl-ae of the Second District
s surge more awful thin the artillery A A M School, in token of their op-
n thousand battle fields; felt tho' prcciotion of his long friendship, serrico-
<■11 Of its restless bosom, ond listened I >n(f dcTot | on t0 tbe .chool. 1010.
inplaining moan until it sank in-'
( men that made the first flight, in an American vals by the crash of falling trees. The road
achine. British men and machines were j hod previously been staked out by the sur-
ady but hesitated, and while they waited, I veyors and the squads of hands, for safety, were
American pluck and American genius won. distributed over a distance of perhaps half a
Columbus sailed westward seventy days to [ mile. Trees were cut down, then cut in twain
find a new continent; Commander Read, with and the logs rolled out, the stumps trimmed and
the NC-4, flew eastward, crossing twelve hun-j trash cleared out of the way. Boys brought
£-dred miles of ocean in fifteen hours and thirteen'water in brown jugs and occasional intervals of
jutes, the airplane, like a giant bird, hurtling!rest were necessary for drink, chat or smoke.
When a stream was reached the cutters went
j straight through, removing underbrush as well
he trip is but the initial one. Men of middle,as trees. If the ground was soft, a causeway
today, if they live out life’s allotted span,'was made of pine poles covered with earth, a
M see time and space eliminated in air travel ditch dug along either side
the ocean. It is well that America has! It was a job worthy of the best woodcraft,
I in this, as America led the discovery of the' and was usually well done, five or six miles of
<ole and led in all modern developments. |new road being opened in a day. Sometimes
Commander Towers and his Commanders and there was an interlude when a property owner
; crews have made history. I would meet the cutters at his land line with a
shotgun and threaten - with death any man
German vessels to the value of about $103,- who first stuck an axe in his timber. Then
ough space at an average speed of eighty |
lies an hour.
have received the noblest impulse to good
ness from your mother and grandmother,
wherefore, stir up the gift of God which
is in you.
One of the marks of culture and re
finement ia the respect paid to ancestry.
By common consent this day ia set apart
to the honor of our mothers. To-day
are to think of her, recall her tender care
for us, the sacrifice and service she gave
in rearing us, and to pay respect to her
memory as the dearest, the sweetest
mother in all the world, the best friend
ever had on earth. In undertaking
this high task to-day I shall apeak of her
religion, “THE FAITH OF OUR
MOTHERS.”
Our mothers did not , receive their
faith from classic halls, nor did they find
it in the maudlin sentimentality that ob-
00,000 which were seized in American ports'came diplomacy and argument, and usually the
ave been awarded this country as a part of work went on, but in at least one instance one
be money Germany owes us for lives and prop-
destroyed. They include forty-one pas-
enger and freight liners and forty-eight cargo
lips, included with the former being the Vater-
man with his gun forced the recall of 300 men
until the law opened the way.
After the workers came the vehicles—usually
horsecarts, and a zizgag, winding trail follow'
'land, America, Kaiserin, Kaiser, Wilhelm Derjed. Then another and another, until at last
' Grasse, and other leviathans of the sea. Their i the road was beaten out and distinct, later to
{ possession by America is a long step toward
i nuddng this the greatest naval power in the
gold. The big ships are now busy bringing
i troops; when that work is done, their in-
ee will be felt in overseas commerce.
Says the Telfair Enterprise; “Tifton has been
i as the site for the new coastal plain agri
experiment station. Tifton is a live,
■wake town and deserves this station.”
become one of the highways of today. But if
some of our roads soon to be paved could tell
their stories of long ago, there would be tales of
more than passing interest.
Says the Savannah Morning News: “And
yet, in spite of everything: What would the
peace conference look like, do you suppose, if
your Uncle Samuel were not on the spot? Have
you tried to figure that out?”
You Do More Work,
You are more ambitious tnd you get more
enjoyment out of everything when your
blood it in good condition. Impurities in
the blood have a vary depressing effect on
tbe system, causing weakness, laziness,
nervousness and sickness.
GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
ret tores Energy and Vitality by Purifying
and Enriching tbe Blood. Whan you feel
iu strengthening, invigorating effect, see
bow it brings color to the checks and how
it improves tho appetite, you will then
appreciate iu true tonic value.
OROVE'S TASTELESS Chin TONIC
ta not a patent medicine, it is simiiy
IRON ond QUININE suspended in Syrup.
So pleasant oven children like it. The
blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON
to Enrich it These reliable tonic prop-
erties never fail to drive out ImpuriUes in
tbe blood.
The Strength-Creating Power ot GROVES
TASTELESS Chin TONIC has made it
the favorite tonic in thousands of homes.
Kora than thirty-five years ago, folks
would lido a long distance to get GROVE'S
TASTELESS Chill TONIC when a
member ot their family had Malaria or
needed a body-building, atrength-giving
tonic. Tho fonnula ia just the same to
day. and yon can get it bom any drug..
atore. Me per bottle. j Torpid
strong in affection and love
that infidelity could neither scale nor
breach their walls. Their highest am
bition was to be a faithful wife, to honor
and cherish their husbands, 'and to so
live virtuous lives that the strength of
their character like golden chains would
bind their children about the altar of
purity and modesty, and that they should
rise up and call them blessed.
Such nobility of life was not an ac
cident, it was not due to a mere ma
terialistic evolution ; it wus not the pro
duct of higher education, however de
sirable this may 1m* ; it was not the ve
neering of a cultured civilization, hoW’
boastful this may be; it was not the
dowery of classic art and music, however
hurraing they may be; it was not born of
science and literature, however human
izing they may be. It was the life of the
soul holding sovereign sway, and trans
muting all the baser things of earth into
the holy sacrament of service. And this
life of the soul came from God. It was
unfeigned faith in God’s only Son,
Jesus Christ. These women of old were
great because their faith in God was
great. They led beautiful and holy lives
because they walked with God, and in
their simple faith they have left tho world
a richer heritage by far than all the gold
of Ophlr.
In such an hour as this our hearts turn
our mothers God. Their faith in the
c bright star shining in the dark hea-
n overhanging the world. Their devo
tion in stressful times offera the noblest
example; the beauty of their character
points to the sublimest living; the calm
and repose of their souls in every hour
gives us hope) and the memory of their
tender voice, like sweet strains of music,
fills all the corridors of the soul; and the
and watched those silent torches bu n , brlve MaV „ them betUhy u»«-
oloug the mid-oight way, ond my B »“ 1 byroachinsthefryint , tatetath ; dl ort-
wss sued into worshipful reverence os l!^ ttoc Xry It today
declare the glory of, 0 ®'
YOUR BABY CHICKS
Are now beginning to hustle for them
selves. They will need a remedy to makfr
bone and muscle. B. A. THOMAS*
POULTRY REMEDY makes them grow
was awed into worshipful reverence as
recalled the lines;
“The heavens
God,
And the firmament showeth His handi
work."
and I exclaimed: How wonderful are thy
heavens, O God!
k have seen the day dawn after the
long night, watched the first faint gleam
on the far away horizon, caught sight of
jocund day tiptoeing through the inter
lacing clouds that hung on the sable
skirts of night, and then saw the full
orbed sun break on the earth and with
shimmering kisses lighting up hill aud
vale, und I cried:
Light is but the skirt of thy garment
O God, Light is like unto Th<
Yes, I have seen the beauty of Nature
in field and garden, on the undulating
landscape, in the blushing rose and the
sunset of a summer’s cloudless day. But
the most beautiful thing on this earth,
the most glorious thing beneath the shin
ing stare of God, is a man or woman
whose soul has been quickened into
revereut consciousness of the unseen
and who has consecrated all their ran
somed powers to fulfill in Ijfe the de
sign and purpose of their creation
Who can say how much of all v
or will ever be, is due to our mothers?
her life, her example of devotion, her
complaining service, her heroic suffering
for us, and her tender love? but above
all her triumphant faith in God which
pointed us the better way?
O, Mothers you w ? ho live to-day, grow
Rickereon Gro.
idr.
MORE HOUSES TO GO UP
strength of their faith cheers ua in the not wcflry |n wdMolng . Be faithful to
mightiest undertaking. ^ high trust God has reposed in you by
If your mother is living to-day go to
her and putting your arms about her
neck plant a new kiss on her cheock, and
with holy vow say to her: Your God,
mother dear, shall be my God, the faith
that has made you the best, the sweetest,
and dearest mother in all the world shall
be my faith; and begin to live with her
that holy and blessed life.
If she has passed, and is with you no
more on earth, think of her to-day! Re
call her unfeigned faith, remember her
love, her sacrifice, and her service tor
you, and may such holy reflection bring
you to her God, and in the embrace of Hla
all-encircling love you will find the same
strength that was here, the same beauty
of life she unfolded, the same holy pur
pose in service, and in the end the same
heaven into which ihe has entered.
Life it the gift of God, and it is only
when we are living life as God has ap
pointed it do we live nobly. Life apart
from God whatever may be its natural
666 quickly relieve* Congfapa-
tion, Biliousness, Los* of Ap
petite and Headaches, doe to
the gift of children. So live that these
children may with pride point to you
mother, and that in all the dangers and
temptations of life they may be able to
choose the right way because mother
taught them by precept and example that
way.
And, O ye Spirts of departed mothers,
ye holy women who lived in ‘former
times, if ye are permitted to look down
from your glorified abode npon us of to
day, and if ye are permitted to bestbw a
blessing on the living, give unto ua we
ask above all else, a double portion of
that “unfeigned faith” which made yon
the worthy women you were on earth,
aud placed you among the glorified
heaven! And may God Almighty grant it
for Jesus’ Sake, Amen!
RGEONS agree that to cases of
Burns, Braises and Wounds, the
IT TREATMENT Is most impor*
SURGEONS
Cuts, F
FIRST ,
tant. When an EFFICIENT antiseptic
Lhrer.
TIC and HEALING AGENT. Bay it
now and be ready for in emergency.
adY Sold by Conger Drag Co.
C W Cauthen Bays Six Lots and Will
Build New Houses For Sale.
Mr. C W Cauthen. the contractor, has
bought the six residence lots on the
east side of College^ Avenue, between
Tenth and Twelfth Streets.
Mr. Cauthen bought the lots as an in
vestment. He expects to start work on
a bungalow ou one of the lots in the near
future. The bungalow will be for sale
and he will build houses on the other lots
as rapidly as building conditions will per
mit.
ABOUT RHEUMATISM
waste of time and money to take medi
cine internally for chronic and muscular
rheumatism, and about ninety-nine out
of -a hundred cases are one or the other
of these varieties. And that is really
necessary to afford relief is to epply
Chamberlain’s Liniment freely. Try it.
It costs but 35 cents per bottle. I«vge
size GO cents. tar.
Grove’s Tasteless chin Tonic
restores vitality and energy by {unifying and en
riching the blood. Yon can toon feel Its Strength
ening, Invigorating Effect. Price 60c.
The next time yon have
chills and Fever
TAKE
MECi
"It Kills the ChM
A
A scientific prescription
malaria germs, breaks uj
Fever and builds up the
Sold and guaranteed
PRICE 25 C
J. N. BROWN
II
PABH LANDS ui CITI FBOFBtTX
I MASK
run AND on LOANS
FOB BENT