The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, December 17, 1909, Image 9
I Worn Women ] 1 . Women, worn and tired from overwork, need a I I tonic. That feeling of weakness or helplessness willl ■ not leave you of itself. You should take Wine of I I Cardui, that effectual remedy for the ailments and I § weaknesses of women. Thousands of women have I m tried Cardui and write enthusiastically of the great I I benefit it has been to them. Try it—don’t experiment I I «=use this reliable, oft-tried medicine. ps CARD UI I The Womans Tonic ■i Sirs. Rena Hare, of Pierce, Fla., tried Cardui and afterward I 9 wrote: “I was a sufferer from all sorts of female trouble, had I 1 P am ( j n m y and legs, could not sleep, had shortness of breath. I H a I suffered for years, until my husband insisted on my trying I I Cardui. The first bottle gave me relief and now lam almost well.” I I Try Cardui. ’Twill help you. I AT ALL DRUG STORES ' ‘ ' 7 ' district : OCT. NOV. dec. _J j ;(• • . Hampton, 6 4 and 23" 15 Sixth 7 5 and 24 Flippen 8 8 and 25 Stockbridge, . . . . . . 11 9 and 26 17 Shakerag, 12 10 and 29 Brushy Knob 13 11 and 30 Love’s, ........ 14 12 1 McMullen’s, . . . . ' . 15- 15 ,2 Beersheba, 2516 3 Sandy Ridge, . . . . . 26 17 6 Tussahaw, . . . . . . 27 18 8 Locust Grove, ...... - 1 and 19 9andl4 Lowe’s, ....... 3 and 22 10 •jnapping Shoals, 10 o’clock A. M., . . 13 1 sland Shoals, 12 o’clock, M., . , 13 Woodstown, 2 o’clock P. M.,. ... 13 McDonough, All First Court WeeK. On the Second Court week, Oct. 28, 29, 30. First, Tuesdays and Saturdays until BOOKS ARE CLOSED DEC. 20. JOHN S. GILBERT, T. C. Henry County, Ga. GASOLINE ENGINE Ken frai Send for illustrated catalogue of ! engines, wind mills, and feed GEN. AGTS. ATLANTA, GA. 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 EIXPEINSIVEI- If you agree with us on this point ask your dealer to show you a NORMAN. We believe today we build the best buggy in Georgia, and want yon to know it. Built en 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., Crffln, Ca- STOCKBRIDGE WAREHOUSE CO. Will store your Cotton FREEffor 30 Days. Insurance Rates : 10c. per month.' Storage after 30 Days 25c. per month for four months; Balance of the Year J RReei £*r~SEND US YOUR COTTON! GIRLS BILLION Domestic Science Proves What Farmers’ Daughters Can Do. . TEACH COOKING AND SEWING Housekeepers oa the Farm Are to Be Trained In the Art of Saving. "Short Course Planned.” Omaha, Neb. —One billion dollars is the amount which girls on Amer ican farms will be able to save the nation every year when they are trained in domestic science and art as the young men of the farms are being trained in scientific agriculture, according to Jessica E. Besack of Co lumbia University, director of the do mestic science department of the Na tion Corn Exposition. The United States produces yearly practically $7,500,01Rt,CH)0 worth of plant and animal products. One bil lion of this is credited to agricultural science. Such authorities as Willett M. Hays, assistant secretary of agri culture, say that science will make the new wealth produced on the farm 11110,000,000,000 annualy without in creasing agricultural acreage. Now come the women of the agri cultural colleges, who have made the departments of domestic science a success, and say that another biliion can be mqde, because it can be saved by the housekeepers of the farms when they learn to eliminate waste, prepare foods from cheaper materials, substitute the inexpensive for the high in price and buy clothing as the experts buy it. Thus, while the young men learn to quadruple the crops, the girls are learning to reduce the cost of living one-half. In the; fields and orchards the farmter creates new cereals and trees; in the kitchen the women will, create new and nutritious foods with-' out the use of eggs, butter and high priced meats. As the young men eliminate gullied hillsides by systematic tree-planting,l the young women wll cut out waste by systematic buying to build up their wardrobes one season at a time. { in colleges and women thinkers who have realized for years that the housewivpS , demanded a training school have been puzzled as to just how to get the. information they have gathered disseminated. They have demonstrated tlxat they have mastered the problems of living, and speculated as to' why the initial scheme of Vasshr Colege had'fallen through; why Wellesley fbund it hard; to live up to the plan. The colleges did not reach, and dp not reach the masses,” they said/'Tnd' young women will never save one bil lion if they must first get a training in the colleges.” The "Short Course” Planned. So the “short course” was planned and these short courses, given in con nection and farmers’ institutes and school district meetings, are taking the knowledge to thousands of girls who will manage the homes on the farms of the future. Another plan has been inaugurated. The American Beef Producers’ Asso ciation has calmly given notice that unless the people of the nation learn to use the cheaper cuts of meat, the average family will not be able to afford meat in the future! The asso ciation offered an illustrated lecture and a demonstration. A little party of college women gath ered around Miss Jessica Besack and opened at the National Corn Exposi tion, which was held In Omaha, De cember 6 to 18, a great laboratory where a thousand girls took a short course in domestic science and art. Every day these girls cooked, sew ed and shopped. For the best dishes the exposition management offered prizes. A girl won SIOO for ten corn muffins; a good price for muffins Here’s a meal which the girls pre pared. It looks good, and four per sons may have It at a total cost for the four of exactly 77 cents. A 77-Cent Dinner. Celery Soup (5 cents) Hot Potato Salad (16 cents) Garden Peas (20 cents) Cornbread (12 cents) Butter (8 cents) Berry Shortcake (16 cents) The potato salad is the secret of this meal. It is a hot German salad and contains bacon. It utilizes both the bacon and the drippings, and costs less than It would to serve the pota toes to four persons. To sew on buttons so that the thread and not the cloth will bear the strain will result in a saving that the de partment proposes to teach the girl's how to do such little things. To square darn, to make square-end but tonholes, to make clothing for kitch en wear and many other such things are counted as those which If gener ally known, will help the young wom en save their billion. HOOKWUKM UWVtNTION. Rockefeller Promises to Favor Tampa for Meeting. Tampa, Fla. —In a letter received here, John D. Rockefeller, who donat ed $1,000,000 for the extermination of the hook worm, promised to favor Tampa as the meeting place of the general conference of those named on the hook worm commission. The conference, if held here, will be one of the many important events scheduled during the exposition to be held here during February, celebrat ing the benefits that will accrue to Tampa on the completion of the Pan ama canal. Extensive arrangements are being made to entertain the commissioners. PRUE OF COTTON SOARS. Heavy Trading Follow* Government’* Publication of Crop Report. New York City. —Not since the Sul ly boom of 1904 has the New York cotton exchange witnessed a more sensational scene or a more spectac ular nse in prices than occurred with the announcement ot the government crop report. With the galleries crowded with visitors from the south, augmented by friends and relatives ol operators and other interested spectators, the mar- Kfet soared to a new nigh record for the season, with gains of more than $2 a bale. Both the May and the July options touched the high mark of 15.80, both gaining approximately 42 points. Bull brokers prevented a more vio lent advance, as they had distributed heavy sellers’ orders every 5 points up from 15.55 for May and July. They sold enormously, supplying the de mand of shorts and also the inrush of buying orders from Wall street, Chicago and southern operators and t,he local and New England dry goods interests. The markets continued in an excited state up to the close, with estimates that 500,000 bales had chang ed hands is the last hour. May closed at 15.67, and Juiy at 15.74. ‘ The news came from Washington that the government estimate was only 10,088,000 bales, the smallest *rop since 1903. Immediately there was a tremendous rush of buying or ders. Orders poured in from the world over, and prices jumped from 20 to 30 points in the nrst transac tions. , Last trades made just before the re port was announced were on the ba alfe of 15.50 for May. The next sales were made at 15.70, an advance of $1 a bale. This was followed by tre mendous trading both ways and by rapid fluctuations. A break to 16.t0 followed, then came the rise to 15.80. July cotton fluctuated along the same lines, while March reached 15.60 as high point, and closed at 15 40. , , The government estimate is about &H),000 bales below the predictions ol Sne most sanguine of the bulls, and ’tliel action of the market naturally Sixteen-cent cotton, so much stalked about, was not realized, but -five market came nfear it. It now romains to be determineu whether the federal estimators have under-estimated the yield, as has beeh the case for the past ten years During that time the crop has been under-estimated each yedr at from 500,000 to 600,000 balC3. , New Orleans, La.— Following the posting of the cotton crop' report es timfUe of bales on. the cot ton [exchange, the future market took a' jamp which ranged from 25 to 40 points. May cotton went to 16 cents, establishing a new high record for the season. The estimate, was about 200,000 bales bolow the predictions of the; most Banguine bulls. A Ainticipating a bullish estimate, the trade started the market toward high er levels several years ago, and the May option sold at 15.54, four points fboye the previous high price. Yet ft was even then far below the level which had been accorded it, when it broke all records for the season by going to 16 cents. A majority of tue operators had been trading on the be lief that the estimate would be be tween 10,300,000 and 10,600,000 bales When an estimate of 10,088,000 was put out, a small panic ensued, and the market went up with a jump. Methodist Minister Expelled. New Orleans, La —Both expulsion from the ministry and from member ship in the churcl) follow the decis ion by the South Mississippi Confer ence of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, in the case of Rev. J. W. Crisler. He was found guilty of | a charge of gross immorality. Newsy Paragraphs. The city of Denver, Colo., has en- i tered upon its operation of a season of popular theatrical entertainments J in a playhouse owned by the city, the | first of its kind in the country. A ( part of the big Convention hall has been fitted up as a theater, and at tractions are under contract for twen ty weeks on a percentage basis, 30 per cent going to the city. The high est price for seats is $1 and from that j down to a quarter. Professor Thomas Jonnesco of the University of Bucharest, discoverer of a new method of painless surgery who has recently made demonstra tions in London has now come to America to give to the profession here the proof of his theories. A rep resentative of John D. Rockefeller called on Dr. Jonnesco in his hotel at New York to tender greetings. His method is the infection of a mixture of stoavine and strichnine. Plans for a world’s fair to commem orate and celebrate the completion oT the Panama canal in 1915 are under way in San Francisco. At a big meet ing merchants offered to subscribo large sums, and it was declared sl,- 000,000 could be raised The Illinois association opposed to woman suffrage, of which Mrs. C. R. Corbin is president, has issued a bul letin with its caption, “The Campaign Noise.” ‘‘ln some states, including Illinois,” it reads, ‘‘the property rights of women are actually supe rior to those of men. Women all over the country are asking with some ap prehension, is the twentieth century feo be an epoch of,demoralized man and denatured women? When the suf fragettes forsake sound argument and betake themselves to a campaign of spectacular demonstration, do they not lay themselves open to the charge of being allied with the elements of decadence and misrule, rather than those of good sense and sound gov ernment.” Often The Kidneys Are Weakened by Over-Work. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re sponsible for much sickness and suffering, f therefore, if kidney trouble is permitted to continue, serious re sults are most likely to follow. Your other organs may need at tention, but your kid neys most, because they do most and should have attention first. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly your en tire body is affected and how every organ ceems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or “ feel badly,” begin taking the greet kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. A trial will con vince you of its great merit. The mild and immediale effect of Swamp-Root, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest because its remarkable health restoring properties have been proven in thousands of the most distress ing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. -[ Sold by druggists in fifty-ecut and ohe-dol lar sizes. You may {ggiiSglSrsaaS have a sample bottle f by mail free, also a pamphlet telling yon iiom.oi .sw&mp-Kuot. how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trqublc. Mention this paper when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Ringhamton, N. Y, Don’t make any mis take, but remember tbb name, Sv/amp- Root, let a dealer sull you something 'in .place, of Swamp-Root—if you do you wifi bo disappointed. R. O. JACKSON, Attorney-at-Law, MoDONOtJGH, QA Office over Star Store. , >. vA •i > “V, * E. M. SHITH, 1 Attorney at Law, Me Doxouqh, Ga..*' Offioe over Star Store, south side squara All work carefully and promptly attended So. l-W~ Am promaml to negM!+{a ) )ee«a an r«*l estate. Terms easy. 1 . Ui Odf. Kennedy V k Laxative Cough Syrup Relieves Colds by working them out of the system through a copious and healthy action of the bowels. Relieves coughs by cleansing the mucous membranes of the throat, chest and bronchial tubes. "As pleasant to the taste as Maple Sugar" Children Like It* For BACKACHE-WEAK KIDNEYS Try OoWlttis Kidney and Bladder Pill#—Sure and Safi Weak Kidney? Backache, Lumbago and Rheumatism immediately relieved by Pineules Delays are dangerous. There is no more common complaint than Kidney complaint. Nature always gives due warn if ing and failure to same may v \| result in piabetes, \ | V Lumbago, Bright’s A** Disease, or some other \W serious affection of the IjT V Kidneys. A trial will A convince you they Vi are unequaled. Pine m 1 ules are quickly ab \ sorbed and readily I but naturally elimin f A v ate P°* sons d ue t 0 dis {ml organed condition of IjJ S Kidneys and Bladder. They purify the blood and are a tonic to the entire system. Do not suffer from Backache, Lumbago, Rheumatism or Kidney and Bladder trouble when you can get Pineules. Two sizes, SI.OO and 50 cents. The dojlar siz< contains 2) times as much as the 50 cent'size. Pineule Medicine Company Chicago, U. S. A. Z. D. Ward, Stockbridge. Horton Drug Co.