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Do you patronize Home Industries? Those of you who have been making
your purchases away from Carrollton should think before doing so again. Think
who sympathizes with you when you had sickness at home? Think who helped
when you needed help badly? Most surely not the strangers far away?
MOTHERS-
Don't yon know yon can torn
a distressed, feverish, coughing
child into a comfortable and hap
pily smiling one simply by giving
CHAMBERLAIN'S
COUGH REMEDY
No Narcotic*
HELP FOR GIRLS
WHO WORK
Mrs. Lodic Tells How Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Helped Her
Tyrone, Pa. — “A friend told my hus
band how Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound had
helped his wife, so
my husband bought
me a bottle because
1 was so run-down,
had a nervous weak
ness. no strength in
my body and pains
in my loft side so
bad that I could
hardly do my work.
Before I was mar
ried I used to work
.in the factory, and I
had pains just the same then as I have
had since I have .done my housework. I
would not be without a bottle in the
house now. It has stopped the pains all
right and I have found out that it is a
wonderful body builder, as it has made
me well and strong. It is going to be
the * old reliable ’ with mo hereafter,
and I am always willing to tell other
women how it has helped mo. You can
use this letter as you wish as I can hon
estly say that my words are true.”—
Mrs. M. Lodic, R.F.D. No. 4, Box 40,
Tyrone, Pa.
Letters like this bring out the merit
of Lydia E. Pinkhnm’s Vegetable Com
pound. They tell of the relief from such
f ains and ailment* after taking Lydia E.
inkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Ouch! Rub Backache,
Stiffness, Lumbago
Rub Pain from back with amalt
trial bottle of old
“8t. Jacobs Oil.”
If Back Hurts
Begin on Salts
Fluah Your Kidneys Occasionally
by Drinking Quarts of
Good Water
• BETHESDA *
*•••*••••••«
The candy-pulling nt Mr. C. 3.
Smith’s Saturday night was fine.
Mr. W. A. Williamson, of Simpson,
spent the week-end with Mr. G. F.
Stone.
Mr. nnd Mrs. C. J. Smith nnd Mis9
Belle Stone and Messrs. Jim Stono nnd
Robert Barnes motored to Carrollton
Thursday afternoon.
Those visiting Misses Battle and
Ruby Clark Sunday afternoon were
Messrs. Robert Burncs, Floyd Smith,
George Chapman, Ben Barnes, Terrell
Smith nnd Misses Tcmpie and Bell
Stone and Penrl Hendrix.
Among those attending the show in
Carrollton were Messrs. L. J., Roy nnd
Robert Barnes, Floyd and Terrell Smith,
George Stone and Missfs Tempio and
Roll Stone and several others.
Mr. Jim Stone spent Saturday night
with Mr. Wniton Williamson nt Simp
son.
We are glad to say 1 that Mrs. Ellie
Stone, who has been suffering with a
cancer for some time, is better.
Mr. Bruce Williamson nnd Miss Beu
lah Rnglnnd.wcre happily married Sat
urday nfternoqn. Their many friends
wish for them a long ami happy life.
B. S.
sic Lyle Friday night in honor of her
fourteenth birthday waB highly enjoy
ed by all present.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Veal and fnmily,
of Star Point, spent Sunday with hor
pnronts, Mr. and Mrs. James StOTcy,
Mr. nnd Mrs. John Caldwell nni fam
ily, from above Carrollton, havo moved
m Miss Rhodn Martin’s place. Wo wel
come them in our commupity.
Mr. Joe 8hirey, who lives on Mr.
Thomas Traylor’s place, raised some
good cotton this year, having gotten
Cl hundred pounds of seed cotton on
four acres. Hurrah for the farmers in
this community.
Those visiting Mr. nnd Mrs. W. L.
Little and family Sunday afternoon
wore: Mr. nnd Mrs. Roy Stallings,
Mrs. Jesse Phillips nnd little son, J. D.,
and the Misses Griffin.
Mr. Bock Traylor attended the show
’in Carrollton Friday night.
Mr. G. T. Lyle, of Atlanta, spout the
week end with homcfolks.
Digging potatoes is the order of the
day with the farmers in this communi
ty, nyd they are very good.
Most everybody in this community
attended the First Monday sale in Car
rollton Monday.
BEULAH
« • • •
* •
On last Monday afternoon onr Can
ning Club met nt the aehool house and,
after tho business meeting, a demon
stration wns given in making BAKE-
BITS. Our next meeting will be held
nt the home of Mrs. J. D. Bohnnnn,
November 19th, when we will begin a
series of enndy making demonstrations,
getting ready for Christmas. Wo nl-
wnys havo something interesting nt
every meeting and hopo every member
will attend. Wc are justly proud of
the work which our club has dono this
year and hope to do better another year.
We ’vc reached tho end of 1923
With nil its tasks and joys;
As we look back nnd records see,
We’re happy girls and boys.
It surely was a fruitful year
In club work o’i\r the state;
Our members strong, our leaders door
With courage always great.
At verge of ’2-1 wo stand,
Replete with zeal and zest,
Ready to work with heart and hand
To Better Make Our Best.
Miss Mvrtic Jackson is visiting rela
tives in Bowdon.
Mrs. John Carter nnd daughter, Miss
Mnymie, spent Saturday night with
Mrs. J. D. Bohnnnn and family.
Messrs. W. B. nnd Dewey Daniell
made a business trip to Ccdartown
Tuesday.
Mrs. E. E. Hughes is visiting in New-
nnn. .
Mr. Aubrie Hammond, of Atlanta,
spent Sunday with homofolkB.
Mr. nnd Mrs. Jeff Bedding spent last
Wcdncsdny night with their daughter,
Mrs. B. B. Hughes.
Everybody remember Sunday School
nt this place Sunday morning at 9:45;
also singing in tho afternoon. G. B.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our heartfelt
Thanks to the many friends and neign-
bors who were so kind to ns during
tho long illness and at the dentil of our
mother, daughter and sister. May
God’s richest blessings be bestowed
upon you all is our prayer.
Frances, Charles and Ocorgc Nix.
Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Matthews.
Mr. nnd Mrs. C. L. Matthews.
Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Burns,
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Folds.
Turnip seed sown now grow very
tweet turnips. We have seed in bulk.
—Jaekson’s 10e Store. tfle
Back hurt you? Can’t straighten
up without feeling sudden pains,
•harp aches and twinges ? Now listen I
That’s lumbago, sciatica or maybe
from a strain, and you’ll get relief the
moment you rub your back with sooth
ing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil.”
Nothing else takes out soreness, lame
ness and stiffness so quickly. You
simply rub it on your back and out
comes the pain. It is harmless and
doesn’t bum the skin.
Limber upl Don’t suffer! Get a
small trial bottle of old, honest “St.
Jacobs Oil” from any drug store, and
after using it just once, you’ll forget
that you ever had backache, lumbago
or sciatica, because your back will
never hurt or cause any more misery.
It never disappoints and has been rec
ommended for 60 years.
* GRAVEL CREST *
******•*•*••
Cotton picking is about over. Gath
ering corn nnd sowing oats is the order
of the day when the weather will per
mit.
Your scribe, accompanied by his fa
ther, Mr. J. B. Borough, mado a busi
ness trip to Meriwether county last
Wednesday, eifo sing the river nt Hol
lingsworth ’s fci • and going from tlioro
Newnan, Luthc: ;villc, Rocky Mount,
traveling over a good deal of tho farm
ing section of that county. They seem
to ho making more cotton to the ground
than they did last year, but didn’t plant
as much, so thoy say they will got nbout
tho samo amount of cotton, making two
bnles to tho plow. Corn is sorry in
that section. But ns a rule, people seem
to ho gotting in. better Bliupo. Thoy
didn’t ubo much fertilizer, so what they
made didn’t cost them much.
Tho stork passed our burg Inst Wed
nesday night stopping at Mr. J. C. Tug
gles, lenving an eleven pound girl.
Mother nnd baby doing flno.
Mr. W. G. Howard made n business
trip to Carrollton last Thursday.
Wo uro glad to seo prosperity reign
ing in our burg. Several havo just
purchased new Fords and others aro
talking of getting them. Most people
cro getting back on their feet, so to
s^eak. Some are trading on land nnd
some others are triyng to sell or buy.
And, by tho way, there is a potition
now to call an election to votj bonds in
Glonlocli district for tho purpoBO of
remodeling our school building and get
ting moTO land so as to meet tlio re
quirements of law as to building and
play ground. Of course wo want to bo
up with other schools, so como ou,
boys,,and let’s vote bonds and havo a
school building that wo will be proud to
havo. H. W. B.
No man or woman can make a mis
take by flushing the kidneys occasion
ally, says a well-known authority. Too
much rich food creates acids which clog
the kidney pores so that they sluggishly
filter or strain only part of the waste
and poisons from the blood. Then you
get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver
trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizzi
ness, sleeplessness, bladder 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
to drink soft water in quantities; also
get about four ounces of Jad Salts from
any reliable pharmacy and take a table
spoonful in a glass of water before
breakfast for a few days and your kid
neys may then act fine.
This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon juice, com
bined with litliia, and has been used
for years to help flush clogged kidneys
and stimulate them to activity, also to
help neutralize the acids in the system
so they no longer cause irritation, thus
often relieving bladder disorders.
Jad Salts is inexpensive and can not
injure; makes a delightful effervescent
lithia-water drink, which everyone can
take now and then to help keep the
kidneys clean and the bloody pure, thereby
often preventing serious kidney compli
cations. By all means have your physi
cian examine your kidneys at least
twice a year.
- OAK RIDGE—SOUTH
***********
Mr. M. A. Stallings received the sad
news last Sunday that liis brother’s
wife, Mrs. J. B. Stnllin'gs, of Franklin,
was dead. She ,hnd been in feeble
health for quite a while. The bereaved
have our sympathy.
Miss Leone Little, of Atlanta, spent
Saturday night, Sunday and Sunday
night with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.
L. Little and family. Wc are always
glad to have her back in our community.
Mrs. Irving Lvlo and baby, Rachael,
returned from Alabama lust Thursday,
where she had been visiting relatives
for nearly two weeks. She reports hav
ing had a nice time.
We aro glad to report Miss Callie
Talley better, from her recent illness.
Messrs. Thomas and Bock Traylor
and Miss Ophie Traylor spent Sunday
afternoon with their daughter and sis
ter, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wlkor, and fam
ily, of Bothesda.
Those visiting Mrs. W. L. Little and
daughter, Miss Josio ,lnst Friday af
ternoon were: Mrs. 'W. J. Yeager and
daughters, Misses Ethel and Eugenia,
Mrs. J. J. Yeager, of Star Point, and
Miss Louie Traylor.
Mr. Hnmp Denney, of Atlanta, spent
a while last Tuesday afternoon with
Miss Louie Traylor.
The candy-pulling given by Miss El
Here are the New
Remington Game Loads
T HE next time you go out hunting, stop at
your dealer’s and ask him for a box of
Remington Game Loads for the particular kind
of game you are after.
W name of the game is right on the box.
You’ll note that the weight of the powder is
not marked on the box.
Remington tests showed that powder varies batch
by batch—even the same kind and weight. A given
weight of the same kind of powder doesn’t always
give the same results. So in Game Loads Reming
ton adjusts the amount of powder to give exactly
the right shooting quality for the specific game.
Powder varies—Remington Game Loads do not.
Take just one box of Remington Game Loads out
and use them. Notice bow they shoot in your gun.
It isn’t shown because Remington Game Loads
are not loaded to specified weight
The box of shells you get is loaded to give
a uniform velocity, pattern and penetration.
Remington Arms Company, Inc., New York City
EilaUlihdl 1816
And remember this: If you go back to the store
next week or next month—or go to any store in a
different town—and get another box of the same
kind of Remington Game Load, the shells will
perform exactly the same.
Quail Load
Recommended for Quail, Dove,
Woodcock, Rail, Plover and
Snipo. 12,16 and 20-gauge; No.
8 Chilled or Soft Shot.
Duck Load
Recommended for Duck, Pheeeant,
Hawk, Crow,Rabbit, Partridge,Prairie
Chicken and Grouse. 12, 16 and 20-
gauge; No. 5,6 or 7 Chilled or SoftShot.
Buck Shot Load
Recommended for Dour, Black
Bear and Wolf.
12-gauge: loaded with 12 pellets
Qoose Load
Recommended for Goose, Fo*,
Turkey and Ruccoon,
12-gauge; No. 2 Chilled or Soft
Shot.
Rabbit Load
Recommended for Rabbit
and Squirrel. 12, 16 and 20-
gauge; No.6 Chilled or Soft
Shot.
Heavy Duck Load
lt-gauge recommended for Duck, Brant, and Jack
Rabbit. No. 4, 5 or 6 Chilled or Soft Shot.
20-gauge recommended for Duck, Pheasant, Rabbit,
Partridge, Prairie Chicken and Grouse.
Loaded only in 2H inch •hells—No. 6, 7 or iVi Chilled
or Soft Shot.
Grouse Load
Recommended for Grouse, Prairie
Chicken, Pheasant, Partridge,
Dove, Rabbit, Duck and Squirrel.
12, 16 and 20-gauge; No. 7 Chilled
or Soft Shot.
Squirrel Load
Recommended for Squirrel
und Rabbit 12, 16 and 20-
gauge; No. 6 Chilled or
8ott Shot.
Snipe Load
Recommended for Snipe, Rail,
Plover, Woodcock and Quail. 12.
16 and 20-gauge; No. 9 Chilled or
Soft Shot.
Dove Load
Recommended for Dove, Quail, Rabbit,
Partridge, Plover, Grouee and Wood
cock. 12, 16 and 20-gauge; No. iVg
Chilled or Soft Shot.
Trap Load
12-gaune only; regulation
charge of 1 ^ ounces of No.
7Vg Chilled Shot and special
wadding.
Remington,
THE AUTHORITY in FIRE ARMS, AMMUNITION and CUTLERY