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New Fall Woolens
NOW ON DISPLAY
Choose your New Fall Suit or Overcoat from our
New Line of All Woolen Fabrics
All Garments Made-fo-Order
In Our Own Shops
S2O--$25-S3O
Perfect FIT Guaranteed.
The Schwob Company
“Georgia’s Largest Tailors”
MACON, GA. - 355 Cherry Street
LaGRANGE, GA. 20 Court Square
ALBANY, GA. 106 N. Jack
The Standard Tailoring Cos.
COLUMBUS, GA. - - - 1031 Broad Street
GRIFFIN, GA. - - - - 127 N. Hill Street
THE COW, MAN’S
* REAL FRIEND
i > "
We are reproducing the following
from an exchange, which presents a
subject of vast importance to our
country and one which is largely neg
lected throughout middle Georgia,
the subject of the cow. We believe
the cow, given proper attention,
would wonderfully help our people
and with proper consideration in
time would develop an industry that
should be of great assistance in
bringing back and making permanent
our prosperity. The article in ques
tion follows:
The other day we took occasion on
this page to pay a tribute to the
horse. We called attention to the
fact that the horse was coming back;
that the automobile hadn’t driven
him out of the race for popularity
and genuine usefulness. A horse
lover came into the office to thank
us for the editorial and to congratu
late us upon having such a keen vis
ion as to the value of the horse in
this age of gasoline and carburetors.
Bue he thought there was another
animal to which some attention
■should be paid and he left us a trib
ute to the mule. This was also
printed.
Now comes another visitor and de
-clares that mankind has another four
footed friend deserving of special
mention. He left us the following
tribute to the cow prepared by the
Missouri State Board of Agriculture:
Little do we realize the debt we
■owe the cow. During the dark ages
•of savagery and barbarism we find
her early ancestors natives of the
wild forests of the old world. As the
bright rays of civilization penetrated
the darkness of that early period,
and man called upon the cow, she
came forth from her seclusion to
share in the efforts that gave us a
greater nation and more enlightened
people!
For 20,000 years she has shown
her allegiance to man, sharing alike
in his prosperity and adversity, re
sponding nobly to all that was done
for her, until through her develop
ment she became an idol of the peo
ple of her native country.
When Columbus made his second
voyage to America, the cow came
with him, and from that time to the
present day she has been a most po
tent factor in making this, our own
country, the greatest nation, with
the highest type of womanhood his
tory has ever known!
Her sons helped till the soil of our
ancestors and slowly moved the pro
ducts of the farm to market, They
went with man to the dense forests
on the new world, helped clear them
for homes and made cultivation pos
sible for the coming generation, and
when the tide of emigration turned
westward they hauled the belongings
of the pioneer across the sun-scorch
ed plains and over the great moun
tain ranges to new homes beyond.
Truly, the cow is man’s greatest
benefactor. Hail, wind, drouths and
floods may come, destroy our crops
and banish our hopes, but from what
is left the cow manufactures into
the most nourishing and life-sustain
ing foods, and is she not foster moth
er and life itself to countless thous
Make That Old Suit or Overcoat
Go Through Another Winter
HAVE IT DYED
Ladies and\w7c^^sC^^d
0 WK PAY POSTAL RETURN CHARGES
Southern Dye Works
88 North Forayfh Street GEORGIA
ATLANTA, "
ands of little chidren all over this
world of ours? We love her for her
docility, her beauty, and should mis
fortune overtake us as we become
bowed down with the weight of
years, we know that in the cow we
have a friend that was never known
to falter. She pays the debt. She
saves the home. God bless the cow
—little do we realize the debt we
owe her.
HERE’S A BUSINESS FOR
BARNESVILLE
GOOD FOR
$6,000 to $12,000 Yearly!
An insurance man in South Caro
lina, a farmer in Wisconsin, a
butcher in Minnesota, others all
over the U. S. —these men wanted
to own a real money-making busi
ness. Electrik-Maid Bake Shops
gave them their opportunity. To
day they and many others own
their own prosperous Electrik-
Maid Bake Shops, without having
known a thing about the bakery
business before. You have the
same chance right here. A cash
business; no charges; no deliver
ies; your profits in the till every
night. Everyone who eats is a
customer. Business good all year
round. We supply all equipment
and information.
Write or Wire Today
for full particulars. Act now to
obtain exclusive rights in Barnes
ville.
Electrik-Maid Bake Shops
321 Cedar St. ST. PAUL, MINN.
PIEDMONT NEWS
Miss Jewell Spier spent the week
end at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivy Smith visited at
the home of Mr. Edd Torbert Sun
day.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Bankston, Mr.
and Mrs. C. C. Elliott, Mrs. John
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Smith spent
Sunday with the Waller family.
Miss Mary Burns spent the week
end with homefolks in Barnesville
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Elliott, Misses
Ella Wesley, Mary Star and Eliza
beth Elliott were visitors through
our section Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Elliott and
Miss Martha spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Willis.
Mr. Leon Torbert spent the week
end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edd Torbert.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Spier spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. G.
Koone.
Mrs. Robt. Colquitt will spend
some time with her mother, Mrs. W.
A. Waller. We hear she is able to
sit up and hope she will soon be
stronger and entirely well.
Miss Nettie Torbert visited the
Waller family Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Elliott, Misses
Martha and Ella Wesley Elliott and
Miss Mary Burns visited the Waller
family Sunday night.
Plies Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Druggists refund money If PAZO OINTMENT faiX
tocurTltching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you can get
restful sleep after the fifst application. Price 60c.
LECTURED ON CANCER
Dr. E. C. Thrash of Atlanta lec
tured at Gordon auditorium last Fri
day evening on the subject of Can
cer, under the auspices of the physi
cians of Barnesville. A large au
dience heard Dr. Thrash in his inter
esting and very instructive lecture.
He explained the origin of the two
kinds of cancer, which afflicted young
people and old people, and told what
to do when the first signs of cancer
were observed. He advised that
when there was the first indication
to the patient that there was any
trouble a physician should be con
sulted.
Dr. E. T. Holmes in introducing
Dr. Thrash praised the physicians of
the city for the efforts they were
making in behalf of the public
health. Dr. Thrash was heard with
pleasure and profit and the physi
cians were gratified over the intert
manifested by the people of the com
munity.
Cuts short.^d
Coids
Check development
of the cold that might lead to f
something serious. This simple |
treatment cools and soothes |
inflamed, irritated membranes; ,
loosens disagreeable phlegm;
breaks colds and coughs in ■
short order. Don’t wait—right
now ask your druggist
Br.KING’S DISCOVERY I
! -a syrup for coughs Scolds
> —i
THE PARABLE OF
THE STONE BABY
I walked the streets of a City
where I go now and again, and I be
held the changes of recent years.
For the Fashionable Shopping Center
hath moved up town, and the old
Main Street, with its Business Pal
aces of Thirty Years Ago, now ap
peareth Tattered and Run Down.
And I passed where workmen from
Italy and Macedonia dug up the
Pavement, and they hung their gar
ments upon a Stone Post which they
had removed, and which stood aslant
and awry beside the Curb. And I
turned and walked back ( and I be
held it as it were a Cubit Square at
the base and with an iron ring above
for the hitching of horses, and on
each of the four sides this Inscrip
tion :
RYDER
THE LEADING
PHOTOGRAPHER
And I pushed certain of the Coats
aside, and behold the top of the post
was the Graven Image of a Laugh
ing Child.
And I paused and meditated. For
I remembered when that Hitching
Post was New, and a Work of Art;
and the Carriages of all who dwelt
on Euclid Avenue were tethered
there while the folk went, in and
Ryder Made Photographs of them.
And I remembered how his Gallery
was the Art Center of the town; and
there assembled the Artists’ Club.
And I remembered how no Great
Man came to town and got away
without sitting to Ryder. Yea, and
Some Who Were Not So Great sat
there; for if his Old Negatives could
be found there would be one of a
man who might resemble me, who
then had not one Grey Hair.
And I thought with sorrow how the
Horses and Carriages are gone from
Euclid Avenue, and Ryder himself
is gone; and the Italians pile their
Greasy Garments that smell of Garlic
upon his post, and scratch their
matches on the Chubby Cheek of the
Laughing Child. And I said: -
Alas poor Ryder. I know him,
Horatio, and all the rest.
But I reflected that Ryder in his
day had a Fairly Good Time, and the
World was Reasonably Good to him,
and he esteemed his work a Fine Art
and had joy in it. And he played
with Sunshine, and made people look
better than the Law of Nature al
lowed, and gave them Photographs
of themselves to live up to. And I
considered how there must be a
Thousand Family Albums in which
are Portraits that he made, and faces
that are dear to many. And I
ceased to be sorry for Ryder. And
I smiled at the Laughing Child that
was hooded by the Greasy Coats, and
the Child still was laughing when I
came away.—Watchman-Examiner of
New York.
Dr. KINGS PILLS L|i|
—for constipation
from bUiousnar
BE RID OF THAT ACHE
If you are a sufferer with lame
back, backache, dizziness, nervous
ness and kidney disorders, why don’t
you try the remedy that your own
neighbors recommend? Ask your
neighbor!
Miss Lizzie Gaston, 322 Lee St.,
Barnesville, says: “I was troubled
with backache and disordered kid
neys. Mornings my back felt lame
and sore and when I moved sudden
ly a sharp twinge of pain that felt
like a knife stab seized me in the
small of my back. My back was
weak and black specks passed before
my eyes. My kidneys acted too free
ly but Doan’s Kidney Pills, bought
at the Lamar County Drug Cos., cured
me of the trouble. I gladly recom
mend Doan’s Kidney Pills for what
they have done for me.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy.—
get Doan’s Kidney Pills—-the same
that Miss Caston had. Foster-Mil
burn Cos., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
AMERICAN RED CROSS
HEPING THE STARVING
Washington Nov. 18.—Upon the
quick charity of America largely de
pends the fate of a million Chris
tians driven from Asia Minor by
Turkish military success, it is de
clared at National Headquarters of
the American Red Cross. Greece
either will be a sepulchre or a place
of rebirth for these .stricken people,
whose desperate plight is further de
picted in a cablegram received by
the Red Cross from Vice Chairman
A. Ross Hill who is directing relief
work from Athens.
King George, of Greece, through
Dr. Hill, sent thanks to the Red
Cross for its aid and expressed the
appreciation of his nation to the
American people. The Red Cross is
rapidly perfecting its organization
in Greece, said Dr. Hill’s message,
which went on to state:
“Hundreds of thousands of refu
gees are filling the Greek cities and
islands. These consist largely of
mothers with children who, with old
people, are sole remnants of once
flourishing populations driven into
sea by the Turks. These miserable
women, cold, hungry, despairing,
shelterless, walk the streets with ba
bies clinging to their skirts. In
many refugee centers women who
lost sons and husbands gaze from
leaden eyes, looking for help. Their
little children are only hostages for
the future of that element of Greek
people who first established them
selves in Asia Minor three thousand
years ago.
“In many barratries children, and
old people lie day and night, flies eat
ing at sores on their bodies and faces,
their future black.
“King George thanks the American
Led Cross for its help and extends
the appreciation of his nation to the
American people.
“Smallpox is spreading from one
concentration camp to another.
Meanwhile Greece is awaiting new
floods of refugees. The race is on
between American Red Cross sup
plies and these fresh shiploads of
people. The Greek government has
telegraphed its representatives in all
countries asking the utmost help
from every nation immediately.”
A Red Cross membership will as
sist such people as these.
Severe
indigestion
“I had very severe attacks ol
indigestion." writes Mi M H
Wade a farmer, of R P D I,
V/eii Miss. I *ouid sutfer
for monihsaf i lime All I dared
eat was a ittle oread and
butter. .. consequently I surfer
ed from weakness I would try
to eat then the terrible suffer
ing in my stomach I I took
medicines, but did not get any
better. The druggist recom
mended
Thedford’s
BLACK-DRAUGHT
and 1 decided to tr> it. as 1
say 1 had tried others for tv/o
or more years without rnv im
provement mm health I joon
round the Black Draught was
acting on my liver and easing
the terrible pain
“In two or three weens, 1
tound I could go back 'o ea'ing
1 only weighed 123 No v I
weigh 147—eat anything 1 want
to,and by taking Black-D-aught
I do not suffer.
Have you tried Theatord’s
Black-Draught? If lot. do so
today.
Over Bmillion packages sold,
a year. At dealers’
8%
FINE SWEET POTATOES
Some of the largest and finest
potatoes seen this season were those
brought to the city last week by Mr.
C. C. Elliott, who is living on and
operating the farm of his brother,
Sheriff Z. T. Elliott, some miles from
Barnesville. One of these potatoes
.J. B. FALLAIZE CO.
THE LINEN STORE
ATLANTA, GA.
Our Holiday Booklet
Of specially priced Linens and
Handkerchiefs is now ready for
mailinß
A POSTAL CARD WILL BRING
YOU A COPY
We are direct importers—we seil only the
highest type of merchandise.
-IT PAYS TO BUY AT—
THE LINEN STORE
Plow Points
and other repair parts
For
Avery
Chattanooga
Lynchburg
Moline
Oliver Chilled
W. J. Oliver
Syracuse
Wiard and other
Plows.
BARNESVILLE HD'W. CO.
BARNESVILLE, Phone 5-W. GEORGIA
i EuMJM' EH ■
SsixTJto. JeSrJxKfutStV ■x-■ wy 3
CROWD pill
for the
EARLY MARKET _
Keep them healthy— fflaiGh
Free from worms— o ‘jm
Their bowels active— 1
Fit for thrift. m&jjM
DR. HESS STOCK TONIC
Conditioner—Worm Expeller
j It contains Tonics —That give a hog a AUjlTd.Vjb!
R healthy appetite—keeps his digestion good.
I Vermifuyes —To drivo out the worms.
I Laxatives —To regulate the bowels. —~ ,- _
■ Diuretics —To help the kidneys throw off i . ■
I the poisonous waste material.
1 No clogging of the system under the pres- W4>uCl
I sure of heavy feeding, where Dr. Hess Stock 1
I Tonic is fed. j /
I chance for disease—every reason for
BARNESVILLE DRUG COMPANY
Barnesville, Ga.
J. E. BUSH, Manager
Tell us how many hogs you have. We have a package to suit.
t)r. Hess Dip and Disinfectant
V ~ Kills Hog Lice ,
weighed 12 Vi pounds. They are of
the Porto Rica variety.
I ADVICE TO THE AGED |
A ire fwinns infirmities, *uch ns slueKtah I
boroh, weak kidneys, torpid Over. |
Tuft’s Pills
I have . specific effect on tfiM. orflM. I
stimulating the boweU. gi.M natural I
■ rTi-in snil Imp.rts Tlgnr tn ths srt— I