The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, June 18, 1909, Image 7
Get Well iff you are sick, you wish to get well, don’t you? Of course you do. You wish to be rid of the pain and misery, and be happy again. If your illness is caused by female trouble, you can quickly get the right remedy to get well. It’s Cardui. This great medicine, for women, has re lieved or cured thousands of ladies, suffering like you from some female trouble. For Women's Ills 1 * ST'iS. Fannie Ellis, of Foster, Ark., suffered agony for seven years. Read her letter about Cardui. She writes: “I was sick for seven years with female trouble. Every month I would very nearly die with my head and back. I took 12 bottles of Cardui and was I cured. Cardui is a God-send to suffering women.” Try it* AT ALL DRUG STORES G. W. MORRIS, Pres. N J. G. WARD, V-Pres. J. T. BOND, V-Pres. C. M. POWER, Cashier. BANK OF STOCKBRIDGE STOCKBRIDGE, GA. WE HAVE Fidelity Bonds A “Deposits Insured* * Fire Insurance N I* l Reserve Fund Burglarly Insurance D of $250,000.00. Deposit Your Money With Us. STOCKBRIDGE WAREHOUSE CO. Will store your Cotton FREE f° r Days. Insurance Rates : 10c. per month.”, Storage after 30 Days 25c. per month for four months; Balance of the Year FREEI «*-BEND US YOUR COTTON! NORMAN BUGGIES. Our motto for 14 years has been—not how cheap but how good our Vehicles are built for the man who believes the best is the cheapest, in the long run experience teaches that cheap buggies are the most EIXPIENSIVEI- If you agree with us on this point ask your dealer to show you NORMAN. We believe today we build the best buggy in Georgia, and want you to know it. Built on correct propor tions of best material, beautifully designed and finely finished. Top Buggies, Runabouts and Stanhopes. If your local dealer cannot sup ply you, write direct to NORMAN BUGGY CO., Inc., Crffin, Ca- } Undesirable Emigrants i j An Additional Means Suggested for Their 1 * Exclusion J 1 By H. M. Gescheidt • UCH has been said and written about the Black Hand and other undesirable emigrants, but no remedy has been sug- Mgested whereby this class of undesirable persons can be prevented from entering our country. I think I can suggest a remedy. Congress should enact a law making it compulsory for a person emigrating from a foreign country to this country to produce a certificate from the place whence he comes, du y attested by one of the highest officials of said place, where he has either resided or been domiciled, that he is a person of good character and has been self-supporting and never been convicted of a crime; and a ter 6uch certificate has been given to the emigrant and presented here to the Im migration commissioners or officials of the United States where he inten s to or does land, the same shall be duly reaffirmed by the oath and signature of such person that the facts contained in the certificate are true, then and then only shall he or she be permitted to land. If it is otherwise discovered or ascertained that such declaration is false, then such oath so taken by said person shall be deemed perjury under the laws of the district in which the emigrant lands or makes his residence or domicile, and he shall be prosecuted by the criminal branch of the United States District Court tn the district in which he lands or makes his residence or domicile, and he shall be punished in accordance with the laws in such case made and provided. The mere deportation of an undesirable emigrant is insufficient to check the evil results that follow by emigrants that are undesirable being permitted to land. The deportation can still exist and will not be affected by the law as above suggested or a similar law that might be enacted by Congress. Any person, whether a born or naturalized citizen or an alien, cannot find fault with a law of this character, because such a law will elevate the country from which the emigrant comes as well as elevate the emigrant himself in the community where he intends to make his residence or domicile. This letter is not written with the aim to any particular country, because there are good and bad from every country. THE COTTON ACREAGE Probably About Five Per Cent Decrease. GRASS GROWING IN FIELDS Excessive Rainfall Has Retarded Growth of Plant—Supply of Labor Fairly Adequate. New Orleans, La. —The Times-Dem ocrat, in publishing its first report of the cotton crop of ,1909, summarized conditions as fololws: “There has bee* a moderate de crease in acreage—probably about 3 per cent. “Taking the belt as a whole, the condition of the plant leaves much to be desired. “The supply of labor is fairly ade quate, as a rule, though there is a good deal of complaint in some sec tions.” Among the reports from the cotton belt of unuusal features is the fol lowing from Austin, Texas: "That central Texas is without a cotton crop, with half of the month of June gone by, may be a state of affairs difficult to imagine, yet such is the case, and to farmers of this section it is a sad reality. “This is generally admitted through out the rural precincts, and it is be lieved that the same conditions exist throughout the state and most of the southwest. The state department of agriculure in this city confirms this statement. In fact, there is so little cotton in the ground that a com parison between the acreage of this year and that of last is next to im possible. About the only cotton well grown at the present time has been raised almost exclusively by the ‘hot house’ method.” Memphis. Tenn. —The Commercial Appeal, reviewing crop conditions, says: Excessive rainfall has caused much grass in cotton fields east of the Mississippi river. The weather of the last week was fair and hot, however, and much prog ress was made In cultivation. Another week of bright, warm weather is needed to put the crop in good shape. Worst reports are re ceived from Mississippi, where until last week, the rains were very heavy, washing the uplands and flooding the lowlands. The acreage in the state has decreased as a result. West of the Mississippi the crop is in fair condition, reports from Okla homa and Texas being excellent. The rainfall west of Arkansas and Louisi ana, except along the coast of Texas has not been excessive. Parts of Tex as is deficient*in moisture, but the plants looks well and Is growing. The plant generally is smaller than last year, but where not overrun with grass or submerged, is healthy. Showers in Texas and Oklahoma would be beneficial, while fair weath er is needed elsewhere. MISSISSIPPI FUED. Two Killed and Four Injured in Street Battle at Meadville, Miss. Meadville, Miss. Two men are dead, two were perhaps fatally wound ed and two others slightly injured in a bloody street battle here, waged by parties to a bitter feud that had been previously marked with tragedy. As , a result of the affair, feeling here runs high, and state troops were rush ed to Meadville from Brookhaven tc guard against possibility of rioting. Those killed in the affray were Dr. A. M. Newman, clerk of the Chancery court of Franklin county, and Silas; G. Reynolds. Dr. Lenox Newman, a son of the slain man, is bjelieved to have fatally injured, and Herbert Ap plewhite, an attorney, may not recov er as the result of his wounds. Em mett Newman, another son, was snot in the leg. The three were taken to Natchez for medical attention after having been formally placed under ar rest. Two men, named Boyd and Parr, alleged to have been involved in the affray, were slight wounded, but escaped, and have not been captured. L. P. Pricahrd, a brother of Cor nelius Prichard, whom Dr. Newman killed seven weeks ago, was arrested and charged with complicity in the tragedy. The killing of Prichard by Newman was the first bloodshed to mark a feud that had existed between the two men, relatives and friends, for many months. This bitter factionalism hail its inception in a political campaign in which Newman and Prichard were opposing candidates. Newman was tried a few weeks ago for Prichard's murder, and was acquit ted. This served to arouse even more bitter feeling among the relatives and friends of Prichard and the New man family and faction. The fight occurred almost on the same spot where Prichard was slain. Numerous volleys were exchanged, but it is apparently a matter of doubt, as to who fired the fatal shots. MARK TWAIN’S ADVICE 10 GIRLS. “Don't Smoke; Don’t Drink; Don’t Marry—To Excess.’’ Baltimore, Md. —Mark Twain came to Baltimore to talk to the girl grad uates of St. Timothy’s school. Following Edward F. Martin of New York, he said that as Mr. Martin had advised them as to what they should do, he could only tell them what they should not do. “There are three things, young la dies, I advise you not to do. Don't smoke —that is, don’t smoke to excess. I am 73 1-2 years old and I have smoked only 73 years of that time. “Don’t drink —that is, don’t drink to excess. “Don’t marry—l mean to excess." Usroty ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVegetablc Preparation forAs similaiing the Foodandßegula (ing the Stomachs andßowls of Infants /Children Promotes Digestion.Cheetfu}- ncss and Rest. Contains neither: Opiuiu.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. jß^orokDcsmurnwm \ flaiptut Sftd- Ax. Serna *■ i fhcMie Saits- I Arise Seed * 1 %fSXiu,. ) him Seed- Ctoafteri Sugar • mtopvnTJarcr. I Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa tion , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss or Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. J Atb monlhs old r SDOMS-.}SCFOTS Exact Copy of Wrapper p Sugar Satisfies the k Inner Man c Ey Dr. Woods Hutchinson € — IVE children plenty of pure sugar, taffy and butter-scotcn, Gand they'll have little need of cod liter oii. In short, sugar is, after meat, bread and butter, easily our next most important and necessary food. You can put ======= the matter to a test very easily. Just leave off the pie, pudding and other desserts at your lunch or midday dinner. You’ll be astonished to find how quickly you’ll feel “empty” again and how “unfinished’’ the meal will seem. You can’t get any working man to accept a dinner pail without pie in it. And he’s absolutely right. It is a significant fact that the free lunch coun ters run in connection with bars, furnish every imaginable thing except sweets. Even the restaurants and lunch grills attaclfed to saloons or bars of ten refuse to serve desserts of any sort. They know their business—the more sugar and sweets a man takes at a meal, the less alcohol he wants. Converse ly, nearly every drinking man will tell you that he has lost his taste ror sweets. The more candy a nation consumes, the less alcohol. The United States government buys pure candy by the ton and ships it to the Philippines to be sold at cost to the soldiers in the canteens. All men crave it in the tropics, and the more they get of ft the less “vino” and whiskey they want. In fine, the prejudice against sugar is born of Puritanism and stinginess, equal parts. Whatever children cry for must be bad for them, according to the pure doctrine of original sin; besides, it costs money. I The Element of Interest | l fy Waldo P. Warren Cp ♦ T has been said that there is only one interesting thing in !£ £ the world, and that is life; and that all other things are in ♦ Tf + teresting only as they bear relation to life. 4 A $ This undoubtedly explains why certain advertisers + *> make frequent use of pictures which, In addition to the ad ♦ vertised article, contain some suggestion of human life. It t**l M ?t’?*;**?*; 4 * is the radiator and the child, the soap and the child, the flour and the woman, the phonograph and the family. Even a human hand holding a tube of tooth-paste Is considered more interesting than a facsimile of the package alone. An advertiser of men’s clothing often introduces the picture of women, knowing that the thought of their presence instinctively raises the standards of dress. Some advertisers who wish to appeal strongly to women do not neglect any reason able opportunity to introduce a picture of a baby, knowing that it will in stinctively interest the average or normal woman, whether she is a mother or not. Whenever a picture includes men and women together—whether It ad vertises hunting outfits, bookcases, shaving soap, pianos, or automobiles —It Is sure to have an added interest for most people because it contains the one interesting element of human life. It is the same element that gives vitality and Interest to literature, sculpture, painting, and music—that which illumin ates and in some way helps to interpret life. It is the element that unifies all the arts and industries, and binds society together—making “of one blood all the nations of the earth.” It is the wise advertiser who works with the predominating tendency of human life, and cleverly associates his product with the one thing in which all people everywhere are already interested,—Collier’s Weekly. New Crepe Blouses. Fine white Chinese crepe is lead ing all materials for wash waists. One can pay almost any price for such a blouse, according to the quali ty of the crepe, the name of the maker, and the weave of lace or em broidery used on it. Define the Figure. All coats are cut so as to more clearly define the figure, though the box coat has by bo means been given up. 9 oo Drops CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the A, \ Signature / X,)J ft Jr * n (lt ® se vjr For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TMI CINTAUR COMPANY, NIW YORK CITY. Jeweled Clasps For Stays. When all the usual luxuries are provided for women of extravagant taste, some original and totally un necessary excess will be seized upon by them. The new' clasps for corset* answer to this description admirably, for of all luxuries they are the most luxurious. Embroidered Gloves. Long gloves must be elaborately embroidered to meet the require ments of fashion.