Newspaper Page Text
H Why H
0 Suffer? 0
i/i Mrs. J. A. Cox, of Al-
K/fl derson, W. Va., writes: K/l
Lzl "My daughter . . . suf- Izl
KXI sered terribly. She could w'A
not turn in bed ... the vCfl
»ZJ doctors gave her up, and yGS
v.e brought her home to
S'yJ die. She had suffered so
VyJ much at... time. Hav-
F ,'1 ing heard of Cardui, we g/ki
r/d got it for her." f ./I
CARDUI
Ki The Woman’s Tonic
"In a few day-, she be- ■'y
L'J pan to improv," Mr*. Z
</j| Cox continues, ' and hr. _1 /
fvj no trouble at.. . Cardui /
cured her, and we staff /
FyO its praises everywhere." 7/
We receive many thcu- ' <
sands of similar letters /,
every year, telling of the Za
good Cardui has done for /j|
Jy/fl women who suffer front Zj
complaints so common to
their sex. It should do
BzJ you good, too. Try < J
|ZJ Cardui. E-77 ZM
’ROUND ABOUT.
City Notes and News From This
»nd Adjoining Counties.
Little Miss Mabel
Sat on a table.
Down in her Estaminay;
A Sergeant espied her.
And sat down beside her.
And stayed there the rest of the day
Mrs. R. E. Scott, of Williamson,
spent Thursday in Griffin.
Mr. and Mrs. Olin Scott, of Hollon
ville, were in the city Thursday.
Mrs. T. M Mann and Purvis Mann
vs Milner, were in the city Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Manley, of Po
mona, spent Thursday in the city.
Mr. and Mrs. 11. S. King, of Thom
aston, have been the guests of friends
in the city.
Mrs. W. A. Dupree, of Zebulon, is
die guest of Mrs. Robert Strickland
m West College street.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. McKenzie, of
Thomaston, were in the city Satur
day.
J. W. McGee, who will be well re
membered as the man who raised the
big bean thirty-three inches long at
the Rushton Mills last year, has come
forth for the second time by raising
the biggest flag at his residence at
the corner of the Rushton mill vil.
lagc. The flag is 51 1-2 feet and
fs attracting a great deal of attention
from passersby.
Mrs. Edith Andrews, of the Agri
cultural College, at Athens, was one
of the distinguished visitors attending
the Woman's Club meeting Thursday.
Mrs. Neely Smith and Miss .Alberta
Smith and Mr. Will Lewi s Flemister
arrived Friday morning from Savan
nah, making the trip in Mrs. Smith’s!
car.
Mrs. Dodie Gywn, Mis. W. J.
Franklin. Misses Lida Franklin, Ad
die Huckaby and Mary Ballard, of
Zebulon, were visitors to the city
Thursday.
thiFH”
NERVOUS MOTHER
Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Restored Her Health.
Philadelphia, Pa.-—"I was very weak,
always tired, my back ached, and 1 felt
' sickly most of the
■ **■- Ek I 1
■ *>£
111 J |
pound my husband v anted me to try it.
I took it foraWi > k and lelt a little bet
ter. I kept it up for three months, and
1 feel fine and can eat anything now
without di: ! tr< ss or nervousness. ” Mrs.
J. WortHLINE, 2512 North Taylor St.,
Philadelphia Pa.
The majority of mother.- nowadays
o- rdo, there are so many demands
upon their time und sti mgth", the result
is invariably a weak ?ned, run-down,
nervous condition with aeadnches, back
ache irritability and depression —ana
„ .on more serious ailments develop
Jr. is at such periods in lit • tnat Lyuia h.
Imkham's Vegetable Compouirn will
restore r. normal heal by cone! tion,
it VI to Mrs. V/ortbline.
I AMERICAN TROOPS
TAKE MAGNIFICENT
PARTIN GREAT WAR
jSO DECLARES PKLM 1 (OX X A
I GHT AT ATLANTH PORI
i ROM ENGLAND-PRINCE TO
MSI I I RESIDENT WILSON.
A i Atlantic Port, M;.y 24. The
American troop are now taking a
magnificent par! in tin- /real, battle
lon ‘.I <■ West front. Prime Arthur, of
Connaught, declared on his arrival’
her-; today from England. The
I ire v.ith hi; pariy arrived this
morning on a Brit, h cruiser. The
I party immediately -nt t > Washing
ton where they will be r< eived by
li’re.ident Wil-on. In a short time
| tin 7 will go to a I'a :ln port and a '
for Japan. l‘rm< <• 1 <■ . a special
mission for King Gt •>,■? ■ to present
Field .Marshal Baton to the Kikado.
negrßlght
FOR PIKE MURDER
JOHN A. AA ILLIS, WELL KNOWN
WHILE FARMER, KILLED BA
LABORER, WHO MAKES HIS;
ES( APE.
Reports at noon Friday stat
’ ed the negro was brought into
* Barnesville dead at 11 o'clock.
He was killed in a battle with
’ officer.-.
I
Barnesville, May 24.—When he was
approached early yesterday regarding
hi« failure to report for work at the
farm of John A. Willis, several miles
from here, Ed Calhoun, a negro, se
cured a rifle and killed Mr. Willis, one
of the best known men in Pike ocun
ty. Later he fired upon a brother of
the murdered man and made his es-
I
cape.
Posses have been s earchnig the sur
rounding country for Calhoun and it
was reported the negro had been cap
tured. There is no confirmation of
this report and members of the Bar
nesville party, returning to the city
last night are. inclined to doubt it.
News of the killing of Mr. Willis
spread rapidly and the searching par
ties orzaniged contained many citi
zens of Barnesville, Yatesville and
other points. Besides his wife Mr.
Willis is survived by several children.
The negro used a Winchester, firing
two loads into Mr. Willis’ breast. The
slayer came here, it is said, from
Jacksonville a few days ago and was
induced to go to work on the Willis
farm. His victim was one of the
most peaceable and highly esteemed
white farmers of this section and
from expressions of those hunting for
Calhoun there is little doubt as to
what will be done if the negro is
caught. It is not believed he can be
landed in jail.
REVOLT EVIDENCE
WIDELY DISCUSSED
time. 1 went to a
doctor and he said
I had nervous indi
stion, which ad
d< d to my weak
condition kept im
worrying most of
the time and >ie
said if 1 could not
: top that 1 could
not. get well. 1
henrd so muehabout
1 .ydiaE. Pinkham’s
\ egetable Com-
Dublin, May 2’>. -Revolutions evi
dence obtained by the British govern
ment of the resolution ary govern
ment in Ireland which culminated last
week in the wh.de-ale arrest of Sinn
I pein leaders caused the widest dis -
cussion here today. Ihe radicals Lat
terly denounced the statement issued
by the official bureau last night as
one-sided and declared it is a conspi
racy. The evidence purports to link
up the Sinnn I'etn government to the
ll'niic.l States and involved Marshal
| french's appeal for voluntary enlist-
Imeats and has not had the sligntest
! etTe.-t.
-j_. .i n- I'.'"“'*'
Vi :
x --(jp
j Don’t Cough All Night
It wears down your strength, racks
I your nerves, keeps yourself and nil the
I family from sleeping. Besides, you
cun easily step it with
Foley’s Honey and Tar.
A standard family medicine of many
. years standing tor lagrippe and bronchia!
| coughs and colds, tickling throat, hoarse
i ness, stuffy. wheezy breathing rind for
croup and whooping cough. Its effect on
the inflamed lining oi the throat and air
pa- -ages istpilckly felt and very soothing.
I ' "S I i ,11 be: 1 . I’ I rl-! , "I C J
< ' • e.h '..<i -ihi y > . s ; ..,
' ' !'. ■ . .-,1 .
I ::.c c;.‘ . i !■ ■. < ■ Ipl ' £
i Sold Everywhere.
' TO RESIST THE ATTACK
I of the germs of many diseases such a
I
I
ir <
germs, ff the liver is inactive and tin
I blood impure.
I What is needed mo-t Is an increase in
the germ-fighting strength. To do thl |
succinsfully you need t > put on het til).
lUxh, rouse the liver o vigorous action.
o it will throw off these germs, and p
rlfy the blood so that there will be i,
" weak spots,” or soil for germ-growth.
We claim for Dr. Pierce’s Goble
Medical Discovery that it docs all thi
in away peculiar to itself.
It. cures troubles caused by torpid live, |
or impure Good. Tablets -<ll for GOc.
Hampton, Ga. — ” I have used Doctor
i . ...
Pierce's medicines
in my home for over
10 years, and can
-ay to those suffer
ing will) torpid liver,
it will pay you to
use Doctor Pierce's
Guiden Med ic a I
Discovery. You
will find it ail be
claims it to be.” —
Thomas C. Jones.
WoonroiiD. Ten' . - " This: ■ to certify
that 1 have used I octor Pierce’s Golden i
Medical Discovery for my two little boys.
One had night sweat,.-, poor appetite,
sallow complexion, and had quit growing, I
but after giving him part, of a bottle of
the ‘ Discovery ’ he again started to grow,
lie dosen’t have the night sweats and . 1
looks much better. My other little boy
had scrofula and th: medicine cured |
him after the doctor’s medicine, had
failed. Ido not hesitate to recommend
the ‘Discovery’ at all times.” —Mbs.
Rosa Lee Bogan, Route 1.
oIHWHT s
25090 MEN MOMYiI
Major Mallet Notifying Local Boards
I of Plans to Be Followed on June
the Fifth.
Atlanta, May 24.—June 5 has been
fixed as the date for registration of t
ail men in the country who have at- j
•tained the age of 21 years since the t
first military registration. That in- j.
formation is being promulgated by ,
Maj. Joel B. Mallett, administrative
officer for Georgia. j
From the war department there has r
come to Major Mallett the request f
that between the present time and
the date of regisraion thd several ■
agencies in the counties of Georgia I
exert themselves to as widespread in
formation on the subject as possible,
and from the president the request is
made of all newspapers that this pro
clamation be given the fullest possi
ble publicity.
Calculation has been made by Maj
or Mallet which shows Georgia will
register, under this new law, approxi
mately 25,000 men.
aoEliSTis
15LUGSISH LIVM
Crashes Into Sour Bile, Making You,
Sick and You Imse a
Day's Work.
—
Calomel salivates! Its mercury.
Calomel acts like dynamite on a slug
gish liver. When calomel comes in
to contact with sour bile it crashes
into it, causing cramping and nau
sea.
If you feel bilious, headachy, con
stipated and all knocked out, just go ,
to your druggist ami get. a bottle of I
Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents |
which is a harmless vegetable substi
: tute for dangerous calomel, 'lake a
i i spoonful and if it doesn’t start your
■ liver and straighten you up better
- and quicker than nasty calomel and
1 without making you sick, you just
- go back and get your money.
1 f you take calomel today you'll be
sick ami nauseated tomorrow; be
' I sid 's it may salivate you, while if
' ' v.-u take Dodson’s Liver Tone you
■■ will wake up feelii’g great, full of
i ambition and ready for wora or
play. Il ’ ■ Imrmb ■ plca-ant am!
";safe to give to i ildren; they like
I it,—(Adv).
BULLOGHVILLE SOLDIER
ISM OFTHEWftR
W.ishir May 2‘>.—Twenty
thr. e casualties ported by the war
department today snowed four killed
in action, L>’ir died from wounds,
three die! front disease, four severe
ly wounded .nd eight slightly wound
d. i'.iv.T Wii’-.s McEarkmd. R. E.
No. Ba ’.’ ehvide, G;i., died from
eise ,1 Private Charles Sandrige.
■f Bur.tyn, Tenn., was slightly wound
s’. Captain James Norman Hall, an
\merier.a flyer previously reported
’ini.- '.ng, is now named as a prisoner.
Grip, Malaria
means for all of
ns —fight or dir-
Tlieso germs ar
everywhere in th
air we breathe
The odds are i.
fav or oft, h ■
/H ’ 1
X k
FIFTY-THREE MEN
LOST IN SINKING
OF BRITISH SHIP
WERE IN COMPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORT MOLDAMA AND
WERE KILLED BA EXPLOSION.
Ol FP'ERS AND CREW SAVED.
Washington. May 25.- -Fifty-three
men, all of whom were members of
'company B, fiity-eighth infantry,
fourth division, are reported lost in
the sinking of the British transport
Moldavia, the war department report
ed today.
The missing men were all in one
compartment and are believed to have :
been killed by explosion of the tor- ’
ipedo.
All the officers and members of
the crew were .saved by the British I
destroyers forming a convoy.
“I never saw better discipline,” de- j
’dared Captain Johnson, a United;
States infantry survivor, in describ-I
ing the torpedoing at an English!
port today.
There was no panic and the trans- |
fer of the soldiers to the destroyers
'.v:i s made without hitch.
There was a total of jsj American
soldiers on the ill-fated vessel, who
-■ere all part of the fifty-eighth in
fantry.
MBS. muss
BEU) HE FOOO fmUTERS
Appointed by Food Administrator
Strickland to Visit Stores and Fill
Out Government Blanks.
Mrs. R. P. Shapard and Miss Hat
tie Head have been appointed by R.
F. Strickland, local food administra
tor, as retail food price reporters
here. They will visit the stores, fill
ing out the blank s sen t out by the
government and mail same to Dr.
Raymond Pearl at Washington. The
merchants are requested to be pre
pared to give prices when they call.
iLTERIWIfTiPEfiKS
IIT RALLY HERE SATURDAY
Prominent Young Atlanta Lawyer
Greeted by Large Audience and
Makes Fine Talk.
Hon. Walter T. Colquitt, one of At
lanta’s prominent citizens and a lead
ing lawyer of that city, delivered an
address to a patriotic rally in Griffin
Saturday afternoon, speaking under
the auspices of the local council of
national defense. Mr. Colquitt made
a fine talk and was given a cordial
I welcome to Griffin.
IMEMiFTTEMIBOOPS
MIEE 0000 IS TBESBIES
With the American Army in Lor
iraine, May 25.—American negro
I troops are holding a portion of the
[line west of Verdun in conjunction
.with the French force.-., it was an
nounced today. Headquarters de
clare these Americans are making an
exceptionally good showing in the
trenches.
WOMEN tortured:
Suffer terribly with corns because of
high heels, but why
care now?
Women wear high heels which
buckle up their toes and they suffer
terribly from corns. Women then
proceed to trim these pests, seeking
relief, bat they hardly realize the
terrible iliinrw from it:feet ion, says a
Cincinnati authority.
Corns can easily be lifted out with
the fingers if you will get from any
drug store a quarter of an ounce of
a drug called freezone. This is suf
ficient to remove every had or soft
corn or callus from one’s feet. You
simply apply a few drops directly
upon the tender, aching corn or cal
lus. The soreness is relieved at once
and soon the entire corn or callus,
root and all, lifts out. without one
particle of pain.
This freezone is a sticky substance
which drie s in a moment. It just
shrivels up the corn without inflam
ing o reven irritating the surround
ing tissue or skin. Tell your wife
. about this.
L' 1 1®
ijxBE’XZ 11
'WulEzfeSX ’!
r It Pours, |
_ It Reigns ■
' 1 "if— r"'AN’T you just taste that cup ot good j
I Lx old Luzianne Coffee? Steaming hot J
!,***'—i i Bn d ready to give you a whole ay u J
| • 1 ' ’ pep an< 3 £°'
! ‘ f The flavor is wonderfully good and
I -a? I the aroma—get it? —oh, ma honey ! j
' DteßenXiavtorCk ' Better run quick and get a bright, clean
I ti n o f Luzianne while it’s there. If you
_ don't like it—every bit of it —then your
grocer will give you back every cent you
paid for it. Try Luzianne today and see
When It how mighty good it is,
I TOZIAN'NB i
- COFFEE J
-
IS YOUR HUSBAND INSURED?
A letter received a few days ago with the pitiful notation:
‘‘l’m a woman with 4 little children. My husband died a few
years ago. His sickness took what little I had saved and put a
mortgage on the farm, too. We could live on very little,
how to earn that little, I don’t know, as I am not strong. .lu.ht
I break up my little family, divide the children among , orphan
asylums and go to town to some cotton mill, when so iitt.e would
keep us together? , . .
How different the story might have been if the husband had insured his
life in the New England Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Every wife should urge her husba >d to take out insurance. It you are
interested, write today to
THOS, N. McKIBBEN. Griffio.gGa.
——————-
Refrigerators!
See our display of Refrigerators. We
handle the celebrated
Challenge Line.
We have a Big Stock in all sizes.
Prices are no higher than last season,
ranging from $12.50 to $50.00.
No family should be without one of
these celebrated refrigerators.
FREEZERS
We have another big lot of Alaska
and North Star freezers in 2-qt to 10-qt
sizes.
Keep cool and keep coming for bar
gains to
Goode & Nichols Furniture Co.
| Your Bank
We want you to know that when
you are a customer of THIS Bank
r i ' s aH intents and purposes
YOUR Bank.
IwwdP
fe vl Buy a War Savin S s Stump
and help win the war *
tßs Merchants & Planters Bank.
H ‘ H BASS ’ PreS ‘ RI ’ SrRICKLA ND, Vice-f’res.
J - C BROOKS. Cashier O. S. TYUS, Ass't. < --.hiej
6 PER CENT FARM LOANS ? PER CENT
A client has placed at my dispostl One Hundred Thousand Dollars to
place on farm property in ths countries of Spalding and Pike If .
of money see me. All applications will receive prompt a‘‘fntE
EUGENE R. CLARKSON, Attorney.
Law Offices 1011-2 N. Hill Street. Grfffin Ga