Newspaper Page Text
THE CARROLL FREE PRESS, CARROLLTON, CARROLL COUNTY, GA.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 1923
Red Pepper Rub takes the “ouch”
from sore, stiff, aching joints. It can
not hurt you, and it certainly stops that
old rheumatism torture at once.
When you are suffering so you can
hardly get around, just try Red Pepper
Rub and you will have the quickest re
lief known. Nothing has such concen
trated, penetrating heat as red peppers.
Just as soon as you apply Red Pepper
Rub you will feel the tingling heat. In
three minutes it warms the sore spot
through and through. Pain and sore
ness are gone.
Ask any good druggist for a jar of
Rowles Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to
get the genuine, with the name Rowles
on each package.
BE PRETTY! TUR.N
GRAY HAIR DARK
Try Grandmother's Old Favorite
Recipe of Sage Tea
and Sulphur
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly com
pounded, brings back the natural color
and lustre to the hair when faded,
streaked or gray. Years ago the only
way to get this mixture was to make
it at home, which is mussy and trouble
some. Nowadays, by asking at any
drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul-
S hur Cpmpound,” you will get a large
ottle of this famous old recipe, im
proved by the addition of other in
gredients, at a small cost.
Don’t stay gray! Try itl No one
can possibly tell that you darkened
your hair, as it docs it so naturally and
evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft
brush with it and draw this through
your hair, taking one small strand at a
time; by morning the gray hair disap
pears, and after another application or
two, your hair becomes beautifully
dark, glossy and attractive.
Quart of Water
Cleans Kidneys
Take a Little Salts if Your Back
Hurts, or Bladder is
Troubling You
No man or woman can make a mis
take by flushing the kidneys occasion
ally, says a well-known authority. Eat
ing too much rich food creates acids,
which excite the kidneys. They become
overworked from the strain, get slug
gish and fail to filter the waste and
poisons from the blood. Then we get
sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver
trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleep
lessness and urinary disorders often
come from sluggish kidneys.
The moment you feel a dull ache in
the kidneys, or your back hurts, or if
the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of
sediment, irregular of passage or at
tended by a sensation of scalding, begin
drinking a quart of water each day,
also get about four ounces of Jad Salts
from any pharmacy; take a tablespoon
ful in a glass of water before breakfast,
and in a few days your kidneys may act
fine.
This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon juice, com
bined with lithia, and has been used
for years to flush and stimulate the
kidneys; also to help neutralize the
acids in the system, so they no longer
cause irritation, thus often relieving
bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; makes a
delightful effervescent lithia-water drink
which everyone should take now and
then to help keep the kidneys clean
and active and the blood pure, thereby
often avoiding serious kidney complica
tions. By all means have your physi
cian examine your kidneys at least
twice a year.
A CRY IN THE NIGHT, griping
pains in the vitals, cramps,
weakening diarrhoea - whether child or
adult, immediate comfort and ease in
CHAMBERLAIN’S
COLIC and DIARRHOEA
REMEDY
Pays to keep always on hand.
JACKSON COUNTY PEOPLE
MAKE MONEY ON PEACHES
Mr. W. P. Addison, manager of the
Blackwell Nursery at Blackwell, Cobb
county, was a visitor to the city this
week and conferred with several of our
citiznes relative to the planting of
[each orchards. Naturally Air. Addi
son is interested in the sale of pencil
trees, as that is liis business, but lie
gave us some information relative to
Hie recent success of Jackson county
pencil growers which furnished consul-
( ruble food for reflection.
Mr. (’. J. Hood, prominent Commerce
merchant and citizen, this year ship
ped fifty-seven enrlonds of Elbertns and
Georgia Belles at a profit of more than
fifty thousand dollars, according to Mr
Addison.
Dr. L. G. Hardman, of the same city
shipped foruteen ears from which be
netted around $1,000 per ear, said Mr
A dilison.
Mr. J. B. Hardman shipped twelve
cor sand received about the same price.
Mr. C. W. Lane, of Habersham coun
ty, inis 8,000 trees on 80 acres of ridge
Ini’id from which lie gathered 22 cars
which sold from $8 to $3.50 per crate
giving him a not profit of $25,000, it
is sniil.
Peach raising lias become quite an
industry in Jackson county around Com'
inorce, and we learn that several thous
and new trees will be put out this fall.
The favorite varieties are the Elberta
and fliloy Belle.
There are quite a number of Walton
people who believe that pencil rais
ing could be made a profitable venture
l ore, and The Tribune hopes that some
start along this line will he made by
those interested before another year
A few Georgia counties which nearly
always failed with a cotton crop and
whose soil is poor and barren are milk
ing good in peach culture and surely
this county, with its excellent soil and
other advantages should ho able tc
succeed along this line.—The Monroe
(Ga.) Tribune.
From Vacation to School
When school opens in the fall, rural
children .that have been playing out of
doors should be watched rather care
fully. The change from a day of phy
sical activity to one of seven or more
hours of confinement is great and may
bring on an illness unless a few precau
tions are taken. For a short time at
least, the school day might well be
broken lip into more than the usual
number of periods and the children
given frequent recesses. They should
he advised to ent heartily of strong
foods during the first two weeks of
school so that the physical machine,
considerably slowed down ns it is, may
have a chance to adjust itself.
Moreover, the first assembling of
large numbers o/ children from differ
ent, homes may mean bringing in the
germs of colds, measles, scarlet fever or
other diseases. Proper foresight on the
part of school authorities can nearly
always keep these from being epidemic.
The school should he the most hoalthfuj
place we have for children.
VICE PRESIDENT BOOM
ON FOR HOKE SMITH
Former United States Senator Hoke
Smith, of Georgia, for vice president
of the United States oil a Democratic
ticket is the nomination mado Tliurs
day by Tsadorse Gelders, editor of Tlio
Fitzgerald Leader-Enterprise and proni
incut political figure in South Georgia
Mr. Oolders points out that thcro is
an excellent 1-1101100 for Democratic sue
cess in the national election next year
and lie declared former Senator Smith
as the South’s offering for the vice
presidency would strengthen the ticket
“Senator Smith lins had all the hom
ers his state can give him, so why not
run him for vice president on the Dem
erratic ticket?” Mr. Gelders asks
“There would be a good chance foi
Democratic success next year with the
solid South hacked by the progressive
states of the West. It has been thr
dream of the progressive element ii
the Democratic party for 30 years t(
tie up with the West, whoso interest!
are identical with ourR, and go bofori
the nation with a coalition of thr
South and West.’’
Mr. Gelders takes 1111 stock in the
report that Senator Smith illav he i
candidate for the United States Senati
next year.
“Senator Smith himself declared on
his last visit that he, was out of poli
lies," Mr. Gelders said.
Senator Smith lias been practicing
law in Washington for several years,
hut is preparing to finish his business in
Hint city and return to Atlanta to spend
all his time here. He will open a lav
office ill Atlanta and is now assoeia
ted with his son, Marion Smith, in sev»
etal important legal eases.—-Atlanta
Journal.
Million Dollar Highway
Boost Brunswick and
St. Simons Island
The last excursion of the summer
season to ho conducted by the Atlanta,
Birmingham and Atlantic railway lias
just been run to Brunswick from At
lanta and Birmingham, the destination
of the excursionists being St. Simons
Island, The island is attracting na
tional attention on account of extensive
developments which will follow the
building of the St. SimonB Highway.
During tire last two or three seasons
the A. B. & A. has conducted what is
known as “harvest excursions,” of
fering prospective settlers low rates
and stop-overs along the line to inves
tigate the opportunities which the va
rious counties held out for homeseekers.
Tlio excursion to St. Simons carried
hundreds of people both from Georgia
anil Alabama, many of whom expressed
great enthusiasm over the prospects for
development at Brunswick and St. Si
mons with the building of tho highway.
The highway is estimated to cost more
than a million dollars.
A builder is one who trades in his
home community.
ALPHABET PUZZLES
New and attractive features to please the children and gain
the interest of parents. Below is shown the first of this new
series of juvenile features—something for a “children’s cor
ner.”
These features will entertain and stir the inquiring faculties
of the child. Mother will also become interested.
“Alphabet Puzzles” are a variation and an improvement
on the hidden picture puzzle. They are confined to 27 sub
jects, each carrying a rhyme and an illustration attractive to
the eye. Each illustration contains hidden pictures. They
teach the alphabet, create an elemental idea of poetry and
awaken the imagination of the child. Finding the hidden pic
tures furnishes an agreebale manner of entertainment, while!
exercising the child’s observation and developing its idea of
form. Instructions in small type accompanying each illustra
tion show the parent or instructor which way the picture is to
be turned in order that the child may puzzle out the concealed
faces.
These puzzles form an exceptionally good scrapbook fea
ture—something to be cut out and preserved.
They are especially commendable for the attractive, cheer
ful drawings, each filled with the spirit of childhood. They
are the work of Violet Moore Higgins, an artist who has spe
cialized very successfully in this class of illustrating. The lit
tle ones will take great joy in the pictures and rhymes and in
working out the puzzles.
Find three of Charlotte’s playmates.
Find two sower*. Upper left coiner, down, be: w ecn legs; upper left cornei, down, a loti* lower
of sleeve.
GOING BACK TO WAR
TIME EXTRAVAGANCE
People are getting back to their for
mer habits of extravagance and to the
old love for luxuries which war-time
prosperity encouraged, it is indicated
l,y statistics gathered and announced
by statistical experts.
It appears that the increased pros
perity for the past two yenrs lins in
creased" America’s appetito for din
mmols, ostrich feathers, pearls and a
olt of other things that they had al
most learned to get along without. |
AtInnt 11 jewelers, particularly diamond
experts have received figures which
show that diamonds now aro eomiiif
into the United Stntes in increase!
quantity and of greater value than last
tear and in much greater quantity tlinrj
111 any year since the World War start
ed.
Atlanta business men, who liavi
been studying tlie statistics, say that
this increased tendency to buy the lux
cries and non-essential tilings is 1111
mistakahle evidence of 11 general pr.|
perity. People are making more money
now, wage earners are more regularly
employed and at better wages and
money is more plentiful and moro in
circulation than in the past year or two.
1,11(1 the effect is seen, it is pointed out
tiere, in a revival of the buying of
tilings that never do have a good sale
in lean periods.
The Rural School Mail Box
There is always an interesting time
fur the agriculture class at Hillcrest
school in Waukesha county, Wisconsin,
when the inni 1 arrives. No wonder, foi
this class search tlio advertising col
r 11111s of papers and magazines that
come to the school. When they sec
anything that they think will he of
interest to them tiiey write for it im
mediately. They are greatly interest
oil in dairy cows because national dairy
cow champions live within walikng dis
tances of the school. They write all
over the world to cattle breeders’ asso
ciations for advertising material and
to owners of dairy cow champions for
pictures of their prize animals. From
this material they get information and
illustrations for their notebooks. But
the knowledge they seek is not confined
to dairy cows. Their agricultural note
books show how many topics have been
enlivened by incidents and illustrations
found in farm bulletins, seed catalogues
mid pamphlets and bulletins issued by
manufacturers of farm machinery.
Every rural school should have
mail box. The teacher’s mail should"
be delivered there. The school should
take a daily paper, a current magazine
suitable for elementary school children
and a farm journal. It should be on
the mailing list for certain bulletins
and pamphlets issued by State and Na
tional agencies of education, agricul
ture and public health.
President Coolidge was born on 0
farm and is up and moving around at
5:45 eastern time in the morning. The
new president evidently is observing
‘farm hours.”
DO IT WITH A CLUB
Whether it is a baseball club, a corn
calf, or canning club, a pig, potato or
poultry club, the boys and girls are
learning how easy it^ is to do things
through clubs.. They arc learning early
the value of organization. Is this not
a promise that the next generation of
farmers will know how to organize for
-success? One of tire first activities of
new school year will ho the formation
of clubs in thousands of country schools.
The wise teacher will encourage the
movement knowing it to bo a means of
promoting regular attendance and in
creasing the interest in school work
In addition to ono or two of tho clubs
mentioned evory school should have a
School Improvement Club in which the
boys and girls can unite.
It’s bettor to be linppy than snappy.
ITCHING ECZEMA
DRIED RIGHT UP
BY THIS SULPHUR
Any breaking out of the skin, even
fiery, itching eczema, can be quickly
overcome by applying a little Mentho-
Sulphur, says a noted skin specialist
Because of its germ destroying proper
ties, this sulphur preparation instantly
brings ease from skin irritation, soothes
and heals the eczema right up and
leaves the skin clear and smooth.
It seldom fails to relieve the torment
and disfigurement. Sufferers from skin
trouble should get a little jar of Rowles
Mentho-Sulphur from any good drug
gist and use it like a cold cream.
SHOP COAL
For best grade washed and sized Shop Coal at reas
onable price, come to
Maple Street Warehouse
| BRICK j
| Best Brick in Carrpll County 1
I (Size 2 1-2x4x8) |
| PRICES REASONABLE |
| PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY |
| Prompt Delivery On All Orders |
| For prices call on A. L. Kuglar or W. O. I
I Barrow, Sect, and Treas. |
I Bowdon Brick Co. Inc. I
I BOWDON, GEORGIA
1 Wholesale and Retail i
The StudebaUer Light-Six
Five-Passenger Touring Car
$,
Don’t Experiment
Buy a 1924 Studebaker
The 3924 Studebaker Light-Six Touring
car, with its refinements and improvements,
offers the closest approach to mechanical per
fection in moderate priced cars yet produced.
31 continues to set the pace in the amount
of value for the money invested. No radical
departure from approved design has been
attempted. There's nothing experimental
about it—everything of recognized merit.
Every vital unit has proved its satisfaction
in the public use.
No matter how much money you expect to
invest in a car, by all means see this Light-Six
Touring car, ride in it—and drive it yourself.
3t is then that you realize the difference.
Comparison with other cars costing more
—or less—will provide convincing proof of
its greater dollar-for-dollar value, its depend
able performance, ample power, extreme
comfort, and many other desirable features.
The Light - Six is practically free from
vibration because Studebaker machines the
crankshaft and connecting rods on all sur
faces. No other manufacturer follows this
practice on a car at anywhere near the
Light-Six price. This is ju3t one of many
superiorities.
After seventy-one years, the name Stude
baker enjoys confidence and respect more
than ever.
New all-steel body of striking beauty. One-piece, rain-proof windshield with attractive cowl lights set in
base. Quick-action cowl ventilator. Door curtains, bound on three sides by steel rods, open with
doom. Removable upholstery in tonneau. Door pocket Baps with weights hold them in shape. Uphol-
. etcred in genuine leather. Large rectangular window in rear curtain. Thief-proof transmission lock.
0
Eat More Wheat Products and be Healthy
STUDEBAK
1924 MODELS AND PRICES-/, o. b. factory
LIGHT-SIX
5-Pass., 112' W. B.
40 H. P.
SPECIAL-SIX
S-Ptisr., 119' W. B.
50 H. P.
BIG-SIX
7-Pass., 126' W. B.
60 H. P.
Touring.™ $ 995
Roadster (3-Pasa.).. 975
Coupe-Rd.(2-Pass.)1235
Sedan 1550
Touring ...... $1350
Roadster (2-Paoa. >....13 25
Coupe (5-Past.) 1975
Sedan 2050
Touring $1750
Speedster (5-Pass.) 1S35
Coupe (5-Pass.) 2550
Sedan —2750
Terms to Meet Your Convenience
WEBB-HARRIS AUTO CO., Carrollton,
THIS IS
^cjaagBgKa
STUDEBAKER YEAR
'Oft Ta