Newspaper Page Text
Sunburn
T an , Freckles
a//T I\V Pimple*, Black head*,tc.
fg l i |i \ Hagan’s Magnolia Balm in-
Mi | |l ' stantlycool&and soothesdrv,
mag t % burning skin. A preventative as
'M 1 fl 1 well as a remedy. Removes
MB ■ V skin blemishes. Makes skin
Mm ■ * and complexion clear, velvety,
MM ■ beautiful. Imparts delicate,
B M R lastingfragrance to theper-
I m ■ son. Won't tub oil. Im
’ 8 M possible to detect.
I I
I MagnoliaN
§ Balm V
LIQUID Face and W;jiSa
I Toilet POWDER J'} VV
4 colors: Brunette, \
White, Pink, and fif - ]
Rose-Red for lips, }
I cheeks. Sold by all
dealers, or direct fl ij
j from us, 7S cents, 5;
P Z&ziTit
LYON MFC. CO. 5 .feaSS,
42 So. Fifth St. f
BROOKLYN, N. Y. j
mniniiiiniimmiiwrr---^
o—————
The London Stock Exchange,
founded in 1801 with 500 members,
now has a membership of some
4,000.
CORNS
Lift Off with Fingers
jlTl!
X //
xILX
Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little
“Freezone” on an aching corn, in
stantly that corn stops hurting, then
shortly you lift it right off with fin
gers. Truly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient
to remove every hard corn, soft com,
or com between the toes, and the
calluses, without soreness or irrita
tion. —Adv.
o
Japanese artists take long wood
shavings, weave them together into
a mat and then paint pictures upon
them.
asp™
Say “Bayer” and Insist!
Unless you see the name “Bayer”
on package or on tablets you are not
getting the genuine Bayer product
prescribed by physicians over twenty
two years and proved safe by mil
lions for 1
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proper directions.
Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost
few cents. Druggists also sell bot
tles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
In Queensland the Arbitration
Court has ruled that colored labor is
not to be employed in the sugar
fields if white labor is available.
thTscoupon
and
20 CENTS
ENTITLES YOU TO
A 50 CENTS BOX OF
KANT-LEAK PATCHING
WHICH IS GUARAN
TEED PERMANENT
REPAIR
BARNESVILLE AUTO
COMPANY
Cadillac, Studebaker,
Chevrolet
Bamesville, Georgia
Tom Hood’s famous “Song of the
Shirt” was composed in 1884, while
he lay in bed suffering from his lari
sickness.
-o
The beggars in Pera, a suburb of
Constantinople, often own house?
and other valuable property, yet they
ply their trade dressed in filthy rags
CIVIC LEAGUE MEETING
The Civic League will meet at the
Club House Wednesday, October 4th.
Mrs. Cliett, Mrs. Brelsford and Mrs.
E. T. Holmes will be hostesses.
o
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT faik
to cure Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you con get
restful sleep after the first application. Price 60c.
ANTIOCH NEWS
Misses Edith Jackson and Nell
Ruffin motored to Ramah Sunday
and reported a good time.
We are beginning to wonder what
could be Miss Lois Matthews’ attrac
tions at the League every Sunday
night?
Miss Sara Willis leaves for Jones
boro the second of October, where
she will begin teaching. Her friends
wish her well, but wonder who Miss
Nannie Jackson will chum with now?
We are sorry to state that Miss
Madie Maynard was on the sick list
last week and hope she is all right
now.
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Jackson and
Sara Jackson spent a very pleasant
day Sunday with Mrs. W. A. May
nard and family.
We are sorry to hear of Mrs. W.
A. Maynard falling and hurting her
hip and wish for her a speedy re
covery.
Miss Addie Maynard took supper
with Miss Nannie Jackson Sunday
night.
Quite a number of our boys went
to Ramah Sunday and reported a
good time and plenty of dinner.
The many friends of Mr. J. W.
Ruffin, Sr., were sorry to hear of
him having a light stroke of paralysis
and wish him a speedy recovery.
We hope Mrs. L. W. Ruffin a
speedy recovery from her illness of
two weeks.
Mrs. W. J. Ruffin, Jr., and daugh
ters, Florine and Louise, and Mrs. E.
S. Jackson called on Miss Delia
Howe and Mrs. O. C. Perdue Satur
day.
Mrs. E. W. Kennedy called on Mrs.
S. W. Ruffin last Monday afternoon.
The young people wish to thank
the. Barnesville B. Y. P. U. for their
kindness in coming out and helping
organize our B. Y. P. U., and also
thank Mr. Joe Smith and Mr. William
Rogers for coming Sunday night as
we felt their help was very much
needed. We have gotten organized
and will have our first program Sun
day, October 1, at 7:30. Everybody
has an urgent invitation.
We were the least bit surprised,
but was glad to have Messrs. Ulas
Richardson, Early Adams, Hilton
Stallings and Johnnie Sappington at
the organizing of our B. Y. P. U.
Sunday night and wish to see them
often.
Quite a number of children from
this community are attending school
at Yatesville and say they like it fine,
only they have to study real hard as
the teachers require good lessons,
especially Prof. Edenfield and Mrs.
McDaniel, and the many friends of
Miss Nannie Jackson are wishing her
the good luck of winning the medal
for first honor again this term.
The farmers are busy gathering
their cotton and peas and are well
pleased for having such good weath
er to gather them in.
BLOWN EYES.
GOOD REALTY
Large and small farms
for sale. Also vacant lots
and homes in the city. All
at reasonable prices.
GREENE REALTY CO.
Elliott Building
Bamesville, Ga.
One of the most celebrated family
heirlooms in the world is the Lee
penny, which has been in possession
of an English family since the Cru
sades. It is a coin, and formed
part of the ransom paid for a Sara
cen chief. It’s value mainly de
pends on the fact that it is supposed
to be capable of curing any ailment,
and for this purpose it was hired in
1665 by a plague-stricken town in
exchange for securities to the
amount of S 125,000.
■RICKETS^
A bone-di#eae of early child
hood may be prevented by the
faithful ue of cod-liver oil.
Scott’s Emulsion
contains the wonderful anti •
rachitic vitamin* in JbA
abundance. 11 *• lh * Vfi
ideal way to giva cod- TW
liver oil to children.
Hcotl a •©*.. Bio&wftcld, N J t
Child-birth
Valuable Illustrated Book Sent Fro*
How thousands of women, by the simple
method of an eminent physician, have avoided
unnecessary miseries through many months
and up to the moment
liaby has fully IB
explained in the imurk able H
book, •'Motherhood and the
Baby." Telia also what to^
do before am) after baby M:
comes, probable date of
birth, baby rules, etc., and Wad
about "Mother's Friend,” I■
Used by three generations I\\
of mothers, and sold in alllW IvV
drug stores everywhere, k/ f
"‘Mother’s Friend" is ■jp
plied externally, is safe, IKS
free from narcotics, per--JSH
mits easier natural read
justment of muscles and nerves during ex
pectancy and child-birth. Start using it to
day. Mrs. E. E. Kerger, Slayton, Minn., says:
"It pulled me through.” Send for book to
day, to Bradfield Regulator Cos., BA-S 5, At
lanta, Ga. "Mother's Friend" Is sold at *U
drug stores.
To allow Rio de Janerio, the Bra
zilian capital city to grow, a huge
mountain is being removed, the main
power being water sent at great pres
sure against the obstruction.
o
S l / 2 P er cent 5 l / 2 per cent
FEDERAL FARM
LOANS
We are authorized to
make loans in the Coun
ties of Lamar, Spald
ing, Pike, Butts and
Monroe.
S. B. WALLACE
Sec.-Treas.
GRIFFIN, GA.
Spalding N. F. L. A.
In the French Mediterranean prov
inces all kinds of flowers are grown
in enormous quantities, solely for the
sake of their perfume. Hundreds of
acres are devoted to the cultivation
of the rose, violet and other flowers.
FARM LOANS
We are prepared to handle an un
limited amount of farm loan business
at 6% per cent per annum with a
reasonable commission.
We can lend for 5,7, or 10 years
time, in amounts ranging from
SI,OOO to $40,000.
If you are in the market for a loßn
on your farm, let us submit you our
proposition.
“QUICK SERVICE”
IS OUR MOTTO
CALL OR’ WRITE— *>
CLAUDE CHRISTOPHER
Barnesville, Ga.
Correspondent f err
STATE & CITY BANK &
JRUST CO.
(Formerly X)ld Dominion Truit Cos.)
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
The Chinese absolutely detest
green. A French publisher was one
day struck with the idea of sending
a very pretty and very elegant Chi
nese calendar to the lands of the
Celestials. The article would have
taken well, but, unfortunately-, a
good deal of it was printed in green,
and not one single’copy was sold.
o
Gas produced from sewage is be
ing used to run engines at the sew
age disposal works of Birmingham,
England.
o
To Stop a Cough Quick
take HAYES’ HEALING HONEY, a
cough medicine which stops the cough by
healing the inflamed and irritated tissues.
A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE
SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
Group is enclosed with every bottle of
HAYES’ HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be rubbed on the chest and throat
of children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Hone* in
side the throat combined with the healing effect of
Crave s O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of
the skin soon stops a cough.
Both remedies are packed In one canon and the
cost of the combined treatment is 35c.
Just ask your druggist for HAYES’
HEALING HONEY.
o
For a long time the Boers refused
permission for the construction of
any railways in the Transvaal on the
ground that nowhere were such con
trivances mentioned in the Bible.
' The Ideal Purgative.
Asa purgative, Chamberlain’s Tab
lets are the exact thing required.
Strong enough for the most robust,
mild enough for children. They
cause an agreeable movement of the
bowels without any of that terrible
griping. They are easy and pleasant
to take and agreeable in effect.
o
The food of the lower classes in
Egypt is almost exclusively vegeta
ble. *
The second National Radio Expo
sition will be held in Chicago next
January.
■—— " —-o- ■ ■ ■■
Oklahoma continues tt lead all
other states in the production ef ail,
with California second and TeVaw
thhd.
WISE NOMINATED
Convention: Held In Macon Monday
and Largely Attended.
The Congressional ‘Convention of
the Sixth District was held in Macon
Monday, when about one hundred
delegates from the thirteen counties
of the district met to formally nomi
nate Hon. J. W. Wise as the Demo
cratic nominee of the party accord
ing to the vote cast in the primary
of September 13th, when Mr. Wise
carried every county in the district
except Spalding.
The delegates met in the assem
bly room of the Dempsey Hotel,
where Hon. John R. L. Smith of Ma
con was unanimously re-elected
chairman and Hon. W. H. Wheaton
of Griffin was in like manner re-elect
ed secretary.
Hon. Roland Ellis of Macon placed
the name of Mr. Wise before the
convention, saying that he had oc
casion recently to make certain in
vestigations in Washington and
found that Mr. Wise stood right at
the top among the congressmen at
the national capital. The nomina
tion was seconded with enthusiasm by
every county of the district, Prof. G.
D. Godard responding for Lamar
county.
Mr. Wise was presented to the
convention following his nomination
and made a short talk in which he
expressed his great appreciation for
the honor the people of the district
had done him and promised to do
his best in serving them. ‘
At the conclusion of the business
of the convention all the delegates
were the guests of Mr. Wise nt a
luncheon at the Dempsey Hotel.
The delegates present from Lamar
were George D. Godard, G. P.
Wheeless, A. H. Chapel, W. H.
Phinazee,-T. J. Berry, Gus Smith, J.
T. Middlebrooks, B. 11. Hardy.
The following is the new executive
committee elected for the next two
years:
Walter DeFore, Dr. C. H. Perdue,
J. B. Turner, J. L. Anderson, Sam
B. Hunter and John T. Moore, from
Bibb county; A. H. Ogletree and J.
D. Jones, from Butts county; G. M.
Huie and C. H. Hutchenson, of Clay
ton county; H. J. McCrary and I. P.
Moore, of Crawford county; J. W.
Culpepper and R. P. Minter, of Fay
ette county; S. C. McWilliams and
W. M. Harris, of Henry county; F.
I*. Penn and J. L. Benton, of Jasper
county; J. R. Vari Buren, Sr., and
W. J. Barron, of Jones county; J. H.
Mott and J. P. Carson, of Monroe
county; C. R. Gwynn and J. B. Mad
den, of Pike county; R. L. Duke and
S. D. Stapleton, of Spalding county;
W. C. Hightower and Otis Abercrom
bie, of Upson county; B. H. Hardy
and G. D. Godard, of Lamar county.
The chairman was instructed to
select a like number of women from
each county to be added to the ex
ecutive committee, the names to he
announced later.
Griffin Mercantile Company
Trade Extension Campaign
Begins Thursday, September 28th
Continues Through Saturday, October 14th
An Intensive Selling Program , .
To enlarge our Territory, to win New Customers, to direct greater
attention to this Big Store’s Better Selections of NEW STYLE, COR-
Quality Merchandise for Fall.
Come! Look over the Big Values in Shoes, Clothing, Millinery,
Dresses, Coats, Suits, Furs, Dry Goods, Underwear, Blankets, Furniture,
Rugs, Phonographs, Pianos and Crockery. When you see our Big Dis
play of Bright, New Merchandise so conveniently and attractively ar
ranged and learn how Low Prices are, you will understand why so many
people make this Buying Headquarters.
You will save by buying a Winter’s Supply while this GREAT
TRADE EXTENSION CAMPAIGN is on. Tell your friends abcut it so
they too can share in the Savings.
Griffin Mercantile Cos.
The Big Store Griffin, Georgia
No Subititute Offered.
Say what you will about druggists
offering something “just as good” be
cause it pays a better profit, the fact
still stands that ninety nine out of a
hundred druggists recommend Cham
berlain’s Colic and Diarrhoea Reme
dy, when the best medicine for diar
rhoea is asked for, and do so because
they know from what their‘custo
mers say of it .that is can be de
pended upon.
o
Hazing has been tabooed by the
university administration at -Syra
cuse college.
In 1890 only 60 per cent of
American high schools were free,
•while today 87 per cent are public
high schools.
—: O
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
HALL'9 CATARRH MEDICINE has
been used successfully in the treatment
of Catarrh.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con
sists of an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local aj'pllcation, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur
faces. thus reducing the inflammation.
Sold by all druggists. <
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio.
In all Spain there are fewer than
5,000 children in the Sunday schools.
o
The air which we breathe extends
upward for 12 and one-half miles,
after which it contains so little oxy
gen that it would not sustain any
form of life.
FOR SALE OR RENT —One house
and lot on Atlanta street, or would
trade for farm land. Apply at
American Shoe Store, Barnesville,
Ga.
o
If land were divided equally each
Japanese would have one and a half
acres of land.
o
ApproximattjJy 2,000,000 negro
children attended public schools
throughout the south during the past
school year.
The Quinine That uoe* Nat Affect the Haid
Bccmise of Us tonic nnd laxative effect, I.AXA
Cl VK UROMO QUININE is better tluin ordinary
Jutnine nnd does not enuse nervousness ns,
inring in head. Ueinamberthe lull namean-.
look ior the signature of E. W. GROVE 30c
0
There are a few varieties of
aheese which keep many years. A
Parmesan cheese, for example, has
been kept good 150 years.
The De Witt Clinton High school
in New York city, the largest in the
world, is soon to celebrate its
twenty-fifth anniversary with an
“old sclgjol week.”
: 0
STOVE AND FIRE WOOD—Sawed
to fit your stove and grate. $2.00
per half cord. Howard Lumber Cos.
Call Phone 74—2 Rings. tf.
. o
When a lobster’s shell becomes too
small the lobster bursts it J)y a series
of spasms and grows anew one.
O’ —•
The biggest soda fountain in the
world is in Montreal. It seats 150
persons at the counter.
LIQUOR AUTOMOBILES
ARE CAPTURE
Chief W. S. Riviere and Prohibi
tion Officer Ed Newberry of Macon
captured two big loads of liquor in
Barnesville last Friday night, an
other car getting away, which evi
dently contained another big load.
Chief Riviere thought the cars
looked suspicious and directed the
attention ot Officer Newberry to the
matter. Two cars were directed to
the camping ground in Stafford Park
and it was the hope of Chief Riviere
that when he and Newberry reached
the park they would find all three
cars there. The man in the third
car became suspicious,, however, and
went at a rapid speed out the road
leading from the A. & M. school to
ward Mr. M. J. Bush’s home and was
never heard of again. The two cars,
and their drivers, two men giving
their names as George Crawford and
C. H. Buckhalter, of Minneapolis,
Minn., were taken into custody and
the men, with their wives placed in
jail, the women being later released
from jail and going to the hotel.
The affair created a sensation in
the community and nearly everybody
was discussing it and standing around
investigating Saturday.
When it was reported that the
liquor, which consisted of about 600
quarts, would be destroyed during
the morning a big crowd kept on the
lookout for it and when the officers
drove the cars up on Central avenue
to do the job there was a crowd of
probably a hundred people present
to see it.
The bottles were taken out of the
cars and broken and the liquor
poured out on the ground, all except
what was Blipped f to a number of
friends, according to a number who
were present and spread that kind of
news übout the confiscation. There
were quite a number of rumors about
the affair and it has been stated that
! probably the “last has not yet been
heard about it.”
The two men were taken to Macon
Saturday afternoon and the two cars
were carried to Atlanta.
Your vision is priceless. Consult
us for optical work.—J. H. Bate &
Cos., Optical Specialists.
o
A New York dentist declares that
almost all members of his profession
have trouble with one foot, owing
to their standing or leaning habitual
ly on the same foot while at work.
o
Plasterers in Louisville have won
a wage advance to $lO a day.
o
It is estimated that, pp io the
present, there are 47,000 motion-pic
ture theatres in the whole world. Of
the total, America has 20,450, or
nearly one-half. In the United
States there are more of such places
of entertainment than in the whole
of Europe.