Newspaper Page Text
,9 oo Drops
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
AVege table PreparattonforAs
slmilatuig ttefbodamJßeguta
ting tlic Stomachs andßowelsof
Infants /Children
Promotes DigestionJCkerfii!-l
ness andßest.Contams neither
Opium .Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
j^ofouDcSMmmm
Pumpkin Sued-
Mx. Senna * 1
Pochette Salts- /
utilise Seed * I
tefc*. /
mm Seed- 1
Claref/ed Sugar • I
VimUtjreenFkmr. I
Aperfcct Remedy for Constipa
tion , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss or Sleep.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW’YORK. ;
Atb months old
35 Doses-]sCents
Guaranteed, underthe Fho°aj
11^*^
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
O. W. MORRIS, Pres. J. G, W ARD, V-Pres.
jx. BOND, V-Pre». C. M. POWER, Cashier.
BANK OF STOCKBRIDGE
STOCKBRIDQE, QA.
WE HAVE
Fidelity Bonds A “Deposits Insured”
Fire Insurance N In Reserve Fund
Burglarly Insurance D of $250,000.00.
Deposit Your Money With Us.
"" mi gi)araivteed three ytars
• - OH 30 DAyjS DRIVING TEST
/*\~*\ jgjS jBHm J X / A griarante# as
// V liMM any one oould ask for, and saving of from S2O to
-- -A/yN. \Js S4O. We defy ajiy reputa&tc concern in the U. S. $o duplicate our
y- ft prices on vehicles of the quahties we guarantee* Our guarantees
1 are the strongest and mou# liberal ever made, and are positively
\/MVtW\\7\/ /iW \\ / binding; and our vehio Lea* most prove them In actual serrioe
>c\r \ y' I\ jr before we'll expect you to be satisfied. We do not compete wilh
_ l people who have no reputation to loss, or who misrepresent their
RETAILS REGULARLY FOR »)5.U0
Send To-Day For Our Big New Free Catalog, No. 105
It describe*, pictures and prices upwards of two hundred modern styles of the highest (Trade Runabouts.
Sprii^l' Farm kild Mad Watrons t and MALSBY, SHIPP & CO*»
J. 0. Ward,
Dealer In
BUGGIES, WAGONS, HARNESS, ETC
A Specialty oi the AMFQ To P Bu gS ies >
Celebrated fiIYILO at $55.00
Best Buggies on the Harket for the Honey.
tel. no. 11.
STOCKBRIDSB, CSEORGIA.
R. O. JACKSON,
Attorney-at-Law,
mcdoxough, ga.
Office over Star Store.
E. M. SniTH,
Attorney at Law,
, i ,
Me Donough, Ga.
Offloe oTer Star Store, south side square,
All work carefully and promptly attended
10. Am premared to negotiate loans
ea real estate. Terms easy.
f m i.e.THECoucH
Jamb CURE™* LUMPS
[■■DIUQIKIS
IMSSCSVIKV
!j &IICSHS KOZ 50 s &i LOO
| U TBIAIgOTTUfREE
i AK9 ALL THROAT AND LONG TROUBLES
I Off MOM£Y &EFUNOZD- .
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the //A,
Signature /Am
of w
cy Jr* ' n
hX Ose
\j For Over
j Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW TOM CITY.
piIBERUM
REMJEEfy
laoaaaaßaMHaaaoaaaafagßuaaaaafmnaMa
CTTS.33S
Coughs,Colds,
CROUP,
WhoopingCoigii
This remedy can always be depended upon and
is pleasant to take, it contains no opium or
other harmful drug and may be given as confi
dently to a baby as to an aduiL
Price 25 cents, large site 50 cents.
Tribulation 0 of the Aviation Era.
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f*"" 1 AIRSft, I t P "/X',
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—Cartoon by llerryman, in the Washington Star.
11. S. ALONE CAN SAVE STARVING FLOOD VICTIMS
MEXICO CANNOT SUCCOR ITS 15,000 SURVIVORS
Plea Tor Assistance Comes From Republic Across Our Border-Women and
Children in Inland Towns Greatest SuHerers-Number of
Dead Now Placed as High as 15,000.
San Antonio, Texas. —Messages re
ceived here indicate that the report
sent to' the State Department from
Monterey, Mexico, relative to the suf
fering there is not an exaggeration of
the real conditions. The latest re
ports puts the number of dead as
high as 15,000 and the number of
sufferers and homeless fully as many.
There is a great deal of relief work
to accomplish in Northern Mexico.
In addition to the extremely heavy
toll of lives collected, to say nothing
of the immense property damage,
hundreds of square miles upon which
there once stood happy communities
have been swept clear of both houses
and crops. For the survivors there is
nothing left to do but extend a hand
in quest of alms.
In consequence of the wide area af
fected the Mexican Government is
called upon to shoulder a burden for
which it is not prepared just at this
juncture. The Government has been
heroic in its efforts to relieve partial
ly the distress which is now greater
in the outlying sections rather than
in the cities which have rail connec
tion.
Anguish Greatest in Towns.
It is in these smaller places from
which the survivors must come on
foot that the anguish is the greatest.
Both women and children are starv
ing. Many have died while awaiting
the relief which the father, husband
or brother set out to procure.
For these peonle only the simnlest
kind of food will suffice. The Mexi
cans will find a great deal of nourish
OUR EXPORTS NOW ARE $46,000,000,000.
That’s the Tota. For the Last 120 Years, Reports the Bureau of Statistics
- Manufacturers’ Big Share--Steady Increase Shown in the
Share They Take in Exports--Iron and Steel Records.
Washington, D. C.—The exports
of American manufactures for the
120 years from 1789 to 1909, accord
ing to a report just made public by
the Bureau of Statistics of the De
partment. of Commerce and Labor,
amounted to $12,000,000,000. Of
this amount two-thirds were exported
within the last twenty years, and one
half, or $6,000,000,000, within the
past eleven years of the present de
cade.
The total exports of merchandise
from 1789 to date amounted to $46,-
000,000,000, of which 26 per cent,
were manufactures. Steady increase
has been shown in the share which
manufactures form of our exports
from 6.5 per cent, in thedecade 1790-
1799, to 37.6 per cent, in the decade
ending with 1909.
Iron and steel products were not
recorded until 1790, when the value
BRIDE POISONED ON HER WEDDING NIGHT.
Dies /After Two Weeks of Agony-Husband Arrested
and Held Without Bail. ~
Parkersburg, W. Va.—A girl of
fourteen years, a bride of fourteen
days, was murdered, poisoned by her
bridegroom, is the charge on which
J. E. Sayre, of Richmond County, Va.,
was arrested here. She was Miss
Blanche Wright.
The allegation is that Sayre gave
the deadly bi-chloride of mercury to
his bf-ide, with whom he eloped two
wjeeks ago. He is said to have been
under the influence ofliquor and not
to have intended to poison her.
The child-wife, the daughter of a
minister, died here in a hospital after
horrible suffering lasting two weeks.
ment in the dried or “navy” bean,
and flour and meal do a great deal to
ward supplying them with sustenance.
Mexican Consular representatives
here and in other points of the State
have issued appeals to relieve the suf
fering.
A number of the Texas railroads
and the express companies have
agreed to carry free such supplies as
may be sent to the relief committee
at Monterey, which is now most active
in distributing food to those places
where help is most needed and which
can be reached by railroad or over
land transportation.
SSOOO Raised by Women.
In this city alone more than SSOOO
was hurriedly raised by public sub
scription. Women of the city gath
ered supplies, both clothing and food,
and rushed several cars to the border
and into the capital of Northern Mex
ico as soon as railway transportation
was restored.
The Republic of Mexico also came
with a hurried response to the first
stories of distress. It is not suffi
cient, although the Mexican people
were as liberal as finances and condi
tions would permit. For this the peo
ple of Monterey made grateful ac
knowledgment, but the need of suc
cor is still great. Uifless the United
States, which has always been “liber
al to those in distress,” rushes to the
assistance of her near and good neigh
bor across the border, the increase In
the number of dead and the extent of
the suffering in the flood'ed district
will be frightful to behold.
of these exports amounted to $117,-
000. The million-dollar mark was
not passed until 18 40, and from that
time forward a steady increase was
shown in manufactures of steel. Last
year a grand total of nearly $2 00,-
000.000 of manufactures of steel ex
ported was reached.
The total value of manufactures
exported during 1908 was, $750,000,-
000. Of this amount Europe re
ceived approximately one-half, or
$368,000,000; North America,
$189,000,000; South America, $71,-
750,000; Asia, $71,700,000; Oceana,
240,000,000, and Africa, -$10,000,-
000. Of the amount sent to Europe
$97,000,000 was copper, $55,000,000
mineral oil, $47,000,000 manufac
tures of iron and steel, $39,000,000
manufactures of wood, $17,000,000
naval stores, and $14,000,000 agri«
cultural implements.
It was on the wedding night of
the young couple that the young wife
was poisoned. The girl’s parents ob
jected to Sayre’s attention because of
his alleged intemperance. They
eloped to this city and stopped at a
local hotel.
The young woman instantly became
deathly sick, and her husband is said
to have left the hotel. - The father
was summoned, and the husband was
not allowed to see his wife. For two
weeks she lived in mortal agony and
then died.
When it was learned that Sayre
was to leave town his arrest followed.
Foleys
Kid-ixey
Pills
What They Will Do for You
They will cure your backache,
strengthen your kidneys, cor
rect urinary irregularities, build
up the worn out tissues, and
eliminate the excess uric acid
thafcauses rheumatism. Pre
vent Bright’s Disease and Dia
bate3, and restore health and
strength, Refuse substitutes,
THE HORTON DRUG CO.,
McDonough, ga.
THE NATIONAL GAME.
Hartford won the Connecticut
League pennant.
Cy is using the spit ball in
pinches these days.
A 1 Orth is doing good work as a
pinch hitter for the Highlanders.
Barney Peltv is the best pitching
bet the St. Louis Browns now have.
Ty Cobb looks good for the hitting
and base stealing honors of the Amer
ican League.
Worcester captured the New Eng
land League peunant for the fourth
successive time.
The Boston Club has drafted out
fielder Henry Perry from the York
Club, of the Tri-State League.
Yale must develop an entirely new
pitching staff Both Van \ leek and
Merritt have to quit the college.
Harry Grant, former Jersey City
twirler, pitched a no-hit game at
Rochester, striking out twenty-one
batters.
Bill Dinneen, former twirler, made
bis debut at Chicago as an umpire in
the game against the Naps. He was
a success.
Manager Jennings, of Detroit, de
clares that voui g players can be
taught to bat both right-handed and
left-hanaed.
The Cleveland Club has taken on
for trial pitcher Sam Griffith and
Harry Kirsh, of the Pittsburg Colle
gians' team.
Philadelphia fans still persist in
placing a lot of credence in the re
port that Jennings will manage the
Phillies next season.
Charley Murphy announces his op
position to the retention of John
Heydler as president of the National
League. “He’s not heavy enough, - '
says the Cubs’ president.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the sjj?
Signature of
LABOR WORLD.
The Gigar Makers’ International
Union of America will not hold a con
vention this year.
The union oeople of Brooklyn are
going to build a tuberculosis sanato
rium at Riverhead, L. 1., to cost sl,-
000,000.
The International Seamen’s Union
of America has unanimously decided
to contribute to the support of the
lake seamen.
In Milwaukee, Wis., there is a
movement under way for the consoli
dation of the English and German ty
pographical unions.
The officers of the Minnesota State
Federation of Labor intend to make
every effort to bring about peaceful
settlements of all labor disputes.
State Labor Commissioner Will
iams, of New York, issued a bulletin
stating that only 21.6 per cent, of the
350,000 organized laborers of that
State are unemployed.
The area rf the Pittsburg-Alle
gheny (Pa.) district —the most in
tensive labor section in the country—
is 198 square miles, and its popula
tion in 1900 was 623.342.
The report on the activity and
finances of Austrian trade unions for
the year 1908 shows that there has
been a diminution of the total mem
bership amounting to 18.515
Incorporation papers of the Ameri
can Federation of Human Rights,
that demands equal rights for both
sexes before the law, has been filed
with the Recorder of Deeds of the
District of Columbia.
By unanimous vote of the conven
tion in Newburg, N. Y., the Union ot
Iron Ship Builders and Boiler Makers
of America determined not to amal
gamate with Che International Ship
Building and Boiler Makers.
TWO KILLtIMN AUTO RACt.
Relay of Race fro/p . Philadelphia to
Seattle Abandoned.
Reading, Pa.—William Brown of
Philadelphia, one of the occupants of
the automobile which was wrecked
near here, while bearing a message
from President Taft to the manage
ment of the Alaska-Yukon exposition
at. Seattle, died at the Reading Hos
pital, making the second death as the
result of the accident. Brown was a
friend of H. L. Buckley, who died im
mediately after the accident.