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THE OASKOLL FEES PRESS, CARROLLTON, CARROLL COUNTY, OA.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1923
A universal custom
After that benefits every-
Everv bod>
T™/ .Aids digestion,
llCcil c l eanses tee( h>
✓ soothes the throat.
WRtGLEYS
a good thing
to remember
Sealed in r,i ~
its Purity
Package
THE
FLAVOR LASTS
Rub Rheumatic Pain,
Soreness, Stiffness
Rub Pain rlg.ht out with (mail!
trial bottle of old
"St. Jacob* Oil."
What’s Rheumatism? Pain only.
Stop drugging! Not one case in
fifty requires internal treatment. Rub
toothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil”
directly upon the “tender spot” and
relief comes instantly. ‘St Jacobs Oil”
is a harmless rheumatism and sciatica
liniment, which never disappoints and
cannot bum the skin.
Limber up I Quit complaining! Get
a small trial bottle from your drug
gist, and in just a moment you’ll be
free from rheumatic and sciatic pain,
soreness, stiffness and swelling. Don’t
nffer I Relief awaits you. Old, honest
"St. Jacobs Oil” has relieved millions of
rheumatism sufferers in the last half
century, and is just as good for sci
atica, neuralgia, lumbago, backache,
sprains and swellings.
LADIES! DARKEN
YOUR GRAY HAIR
Um Grandma's Sags Tea and
Sulphur Rtclpa and Nobody
WIN Know
The use of Sage aad Sulphur for re
storing faded, gray hair to its natural
color dates back to grandmother's time.
She used it to keep her hair beautifully
dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever
her hair took on that dull, faded or
streaked appearance, this simple mix
ture was applied with wonderful ef
fect
But brewing at home is mussy and
out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at
any drug store for a bottle of “Wyeth’s
Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will
get this famous old preparation, im
proved by the addition .of other ingre
dients, which can be depended upon to
restore natural color and beauty to the
hair.
Well-known druggists say it darkens
Hie hair so naturally and evenly that
nobody can tell it has been applied.
You simply dampen a sponge or soft
brush with it and draw this through
your hair, taking one strand at a time.
By morning the gTay l»ir disappears,
and after another application or two, it
becomes beautifully dark and glossy.
Salts Fine for
Aching Kidneys
When Back Hurts Flush Your
Kidneys as You Clean
Your Bowels
THE TEACHER’S DUTY
TO THE COMMUNITY
HOW TO KNOW THAT WASHINGTON COMMENT
YOU ARE EDUCATED
| Kvery country (earlier, however, o\v
a duty not only to his pupils, but also
; to I lie community. The eiunitry school
! o'ust help enrich the lives not only of
| the children but also of the grown pen
j pie of the neighborhood or section,
i There should be in every community
school an auditorium sufficiently large
j and so oquippped as to lie a comfovta-
1 hie place for all meetings. Not only
should the children have their club
meetings, debating societies, etc., at the
Bchoolhousc, but the farmer’s dubs,
farm women's organizations, etc., should
all moot there. The school should also
he the recreational center of the com
munity, and about every sehoolhottsn
should bo baseball grounds, tennis
courts, and basketball equipment for the
Ase of the whole community, besides
minor play equipment for the use of
the younger boys and girls,
Tlie consolidated school with high
school features—with its school farm,
its cooking and sewing room, its li
brary and museum of nature study and
i local history—is the natural “comtnu-
i nity center’” and about its beautiful
i lawns and grounds should be grouped
the neighborhood churches, lodge halls,
fair grounds, the athletic grounds, the
homes of prcaeJiur, doctor, school prin
cipal, etc., and to this center nil the
people of the neighborhood should come
not only for school and church and
Sunday School occasions, but for the
public speakings, the meetings of fnr-
irors’ clubs and farm womens’ clubs,
for picnics, ball games, debates, musi
cals, lectures, local fairs, moving pic
ture shows, corn club or cunning club
meetings, etc.
The rural Community of I he future
mist group itself around such ‘‘social
centers”—centers of educational, re
ligious, social and intellcfunl life. The
school must serve not only the pupils
but the community; and the real teach
er must not only help mold the lives
of growing boys and girls, but join with
those progressive men and women found
everywhere wtio nrc seeking to lift the
whoio level of community life.-—The
Progressive Farmer.
When is one educated in the best
sense of the word I A professor in the
University of Chicago is said to have
told his pupils that he should consider
them truly educated when they could
answer affirmatively 14 questions:
1. Has vour education given sympa
thy with all good causes ami made you
espouse them?
2. Has it made you public \pirited !
:i. Has it made you a brother to the
weak ?
4. Have you learned how to make
friends ami keep them I
5. Do you know what it is to lie u
friend yourself!
li. Can you look tin honest man or a
pure woman straight in the eye I
7. Do you see anything to love in a
little child ?
K. Will a lonely dug follow von in
the street?
». Can you be high-minded ami
happy In the men nor drudgeries of life!
10. ' Do you think iwashing dishes
and hoeing corn just ns compatible with
high thinking as piano playing or
golf f
11. Are you' good for anything to
yourself? Cun you bo happy alone?
12. Can you look out on the world
and see anything except dollars aud
cents!
13. Can you look into the mud puddle
by the wayside and see anything in the
nil d puddle but mud!
14. Can yon look into the sky At
night and see beyond the stars!. Can
■our soul claim relationship with the
Creator?—The Progressive Farmer.
EDUCATION AN
INVESTMENT
Green County Farmers
To Sow Clover Seed
We notice the county agent, of Green
county has ordered for the farmers of
that countv, six thousand pounds of
clover seed. Wo do not know how
many acres that will sow, but it sounds
like a good start in tho right direction.
The many thousand tons of hay ship-
tied into tho state could be grown at
home and much more besides. Clover
is also ono of the best of soil builders,
and cover crops. There arc many red
hills in Troup that ought to he cover
ed with this or some similar crops.-
LaGrango Graphic.
Many boys and girls do not attend
((•liege because they think the cost too
great. As a matter of fact, the cost of
an education is often tho best paying
investment parents can make for such
children as are prepared to enter col
lege. We say ‘‘investment” since the
time, spent in college by a diligent stu
dent. should more than double liis cant
ing capacity by the time his course is
completed. Statistics gathered some
ten years ago when a day laborer’s
wage was $1 showed that the actual
income of such a laborer was i(i300.
The annual incomo of men who had
only passed through the common school
was about $600. When the worker was
a high school graduate, his income was
about $1,200 a year, and when a col
lege gruduate, it was $2,400,
Hut the money value of an education
is not its highest value. We u9e dollars
as a yardstick in its measure. The real
measure of an education is tho increas
ed power'of service and tho higher
standard of manhood and womanhood
that results from an education that
brings culture and usefulness.—The
ProgrossiTo Faimer.
HOUSES FOR RKhjT.—Good 8-room
l ouso, corner Alabama nnd North Cliff
street ;good 6-room house and sleeping
porcli South street. Apply to T. C.
Bledsoe. ICangtfc
MULES WANTED.—We tire now lo
cated at the Hen Chambers barn and
want to buy mules. Will tilso have
some fresh mules on hand at all times.
Come to see its.-—GRIFFIN MULE
CO., by li. H. Griffin, Mgr.
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-
iier.
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 agrcebale 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
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-
cilalized 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.
Most folks forget that the kidneys,
•ce the bowels, sometimes gel sluggish
and clogged and need a flushing occa
sionally, else \ye have backache and dull
misery in the kidney region, severe
headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid
fiver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and
all sorts of bladder disorders.
You simply must keep your kidneys
active and clean and tin: moment you
feel an ache or pain in the kidney
region begin drinking lots of water.
Afso get about four ounces of Jad Salts
from any good drug store here, take
a tablespoonful in a glass of water lie-
lore breakfast for a fejs days and your
kidneys will then act fine. This famous
salts is made from the 3cid of grapes
and Jcmon juice, combined with lithia,
mid is intended to flush clogged kid-
•eys and help stimulate them to activ
ity. It also helps neutralize the acids
»■ the urine sf> they no longer,irritate,
■finis helping to relieve bladder dis
orders.
.Jad Salts is inexpensive; makes a
delightful effervescent lithia water drink
which everybody should take now and
then to help keep their kidneys clean.
A well-known local druggist says he
«-lls lots of Jad Salts to folks who be
lieve in trying to correct kidney trouble
while it is only trouble. By all means
Wive your physician examine your kid-
■eys at least twice a sear.
•WO TO-NIGHT
for lo«eofnpre , tite>. twi brants,
coated uiiijtuti. (I: ...t.--
Without griping or rautrn
CHAMBERLAINS
TABLETS
Sat tout liver rigirt -only 25c
[4f! » for Harry;* wheeling a barrow.
Loaded wSh carrot*, cabbage and
marrow.
tfcrat oOMr.nnHMrm U*pir t»ft cmui down, fetUind rirtt t#* ; urovrlvn i
Mm lift w. eppnVYc*w*r hn, iloof wJ|« »f wptiMN.
The old idnn of education was com
prised hot woon the boundaries of
‘‘leadin’, rilin’ and ’rithmctic.” The
modern idea is that education should
prepare for life, as well for the utili
zation of print, pen and figures.
The progress made towards a
tionnl ediieutionl system is well shown
in statisties quoted by Siimud If.
Beaeli, of Home, X. V„ president of
the Savings Hank Division of the
American Bankers Association. He
said:
‘‘Two million students in schools'
now are participating in school bank
ing systems. This is a 34 per cent in
crease over last year. The deposits of
the students total $9,618,000, as com
pared wtih $5,775,000 in 1922, and
$2,800,000 in 1921.”
The banking habit is the foundation
of industrial wealth. A people which
will not save can not prosper. Few
men easily learn to save after they
arc grown. Habits of thrift learned in
childhood persist through adult life;
habits of spending, formed in- boys and
girls, make irresponsible men and wo
men, too often liabilities rather than
assets to society.
Two million children learning to save
pennies in public school banking sys
tems are a sound guarantee for a sav
ing manhood and womanhood iu the
coming generation. Nor does tho fnot
that the average bank account of the
school child amounts to only $4.80
mean anything. That four-eighty is
the sain of many Are and ten cent de
posits, sums which hear the same rela
tion to the income of the child, as the
deposits made by liis elders have in re
lation to the elder’s income. Twenty-
six million Americans linvc savings ae :
counts totaling $17,300,000,000, or $065
each. The two million school boys and
girls who to-day have their littlo sav
ings accounts and thus loam that the
labor of today must be conserved to
some extent for tho expenditure of to
morrow, are the country’s guarantee
that in the next ten yeers tho increase
in our snviugs accounts will moro tha"
equal the increase in the last ten years,
which was 100 per cent.
A UCTION
SALE!
Will sell my entire herd of thoroug-
bred Duroc Jersey Hogs, about 50 or 60
head. Come, buy your hog at your own
price. Sale will begin promptly at 1:00
o’clock p. m., FRIDAY, OCT. 12th, at
my home on Austin Avenue.
T. M. Hamrick, Auctioneer.
Terms: Cash.
J. T. Jones
CARROLLTON, GA.
Turnip soed sown now grow very
sweet turnips. Wo ltavo Bced in bulk.
—Jackson’s 10c Store. tfic
ms
Names of diseases ending with the suffix ITIS mean that inflammation of the parts
named, for example, tonsilitis means inflammation of the tonsils. Tonsilitis, appendi
citis, arthritis (joint-itis) synovitis, (joint oil-sac-itis), gastritis (soomachitis), Nephr
itis (kidney-itis), interitis (bowel-itis), hepatitis (liveritis), fevers of ail kinds,
PNEUMONIA, pleurisy, FLU, all start with inflammation of the local parts involved.
Inflammation means “too much heat.” Following inflammation there is congestion of
blood, swelling, destruction of tissues, rapid pulse, general fever, and ia some cases,
pus formation and development of active germ life. Remember that the germs never
become active until AFTER the tissue is injured by inflammation, congestion, and dis
turbance of circulation. Therefore the GERM DOES NOT CAUSE THE DISEASE,
but is only a condition of the disease, resulting from the disease itself. Consult any
standard medical authorities on “so called” tferm diseases and you will find that in
some cases the germ cannot be found until a week or ten days AFTER the disease
begins, thus showing that the disease existed BEFORE the germ.
What is the cause? Let us go back to ITIS. The blood carries oxygen to every
organ, and tissue cell of the body. This oxygen goes through the process of oxidation
in order to supply heat to the body. The rate of oxidation and the rate of blood cir
culation, depends directly upon a normal nerve supply. This nerve supply is sent out
from the brain, over the nerves, through the spinal cord and branches out between
the vertebrae (joints) in the spine and these nerves go to every part of the body.
When the spine takes up the shock of a fall or strain that is greater than the resist
ance offered, one of the vertebrae is slightly misplacd and pinches the nerve-supply
ing impulses that control the rate of oxidation in that particular tissue. The result is
too rapid oxidation, too much heat, a condition similar to the short circuit oh an
electric current. The excess heat, congestion and swelling, injure and destroy the
tissue, forming an excess of waste matter.This waste matter is a poison to the system
and makes a fertile soil for the breeding of germs and formation of pus, UNLESS IT
IS ELIMINATED.
As soon as the short circuit is removed by Chiropractic adjustments and the elim
ination is restored to normal by adjustments of the nerve supply to the organs of
elimination, the inflammation subsides and the patient is well.
Surgeons, by their action admitting that medicine will not cure inflammation, re
move the tonsils, appendix or gall bladder, .three organs very necessary to health.
The tonsils are placed at the entrance of the lungs and protect them from poisons en
tering through the mouth. The appendix furnishes a lubricant to the intestines and
is a human safety-valve in case of excessive gas in the bowels. The gall bladder is es
sential, being the store house for bile.
You may have all your teeth pulled, and get false ones, you may lose one eye or
one ear and still see or hear fairly well, you may lose a foot and get a cork foot, but
when you lose your tonsils, appendix, or gall bladder, they can never be replaced
and THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE.
Every year since the discovery of Chiropractic (1895) more and more surgeons,
medical doctors, osteopaths and other members of the healing profession are study
ing Chiropractic in order to learn how to adjust the CAUSE of disease.
You may develop a bad cold today, and think nothing of it. Do you know that
more than a score of diseases start with symptoms of “just a cold?” You do not
know and no physician can tell you, whether you are going to have,flu, pneumonia,
tonsilitis, diptheria, biliousness, measles, or some other disease when the first symp
toms develop. • 4
The Chiropractor knows the cause of these symptoms and he knows how to ad
just this cause. If the effect has not gained too much momentum, the disease will
never develop any further; however, if you have neglected adjustments until all
symptoms of one of these diseases develop, the most logical and effective remedy is
still the adjustment of the cause.
Chiropractic courts investigation ; demands that it be put to the acid test, as it has
been for twenty-eight years and now stands out as the leading drugless system of
health.
Consultation and examination free.
Lamar S. Brown, D. C.
CHIROPRACTOR
Hours: 10 to 12—2:30 to 5:39.
39-43 First National Bank Building
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