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THIS LITTLE WOMAN
r*A ! uo Dnitune
bAiiio oO rUuPii/o
Another Thin. Frail, Nervous
M i n. • I > ■ i •\" „
iiiSu r»iin % i\t{Ck*?y w
.. „ \ I T
*‘TIA«... - is,i'», i .. i,;., , j* .. j. t
IlQuc&u.y t am sjviiul J SO 1
am r<-jily ashamed to V'M you how
much * have ga-’m I/’ said Mrs.
N'-U’f' M'-G in% v : '-> live- at
Eisrhtt enitt Avenue North. Nash
ville ~v , j , -
“Actually it his v ott n to h a
regular for 1 bavo gotten so
stout that mv clot in at -1 fob si' ill
for me, and every dress I wore
last winter will’have to be made
over again,” she continued, “aml
the change in my general appear
ance is so wonderful that my
friends and neighbors are all won
dering what I have been doing
with myself. When they ask me
I just tell them I have been taking
Tanlac, and it is a fact, for 1 have
just finished my third bottle, and
have gained 35 pounds.
“When 1 began taking the med
icine 1 only weighed 105 pounds
and now I weigh 140, and never
felt better in mv life.
“I always enjoyed very good
health up to about two years ago,
when I began having indigestion,
which gradually developed into a
bad form of stomach trouble.
This trouble began pulling me
down and I finally got so 1 could
not eat anything at all scarcely,
and had to diet myself continually.
1 had to avoid sweets of all kinds
and always after eating I would
suffer for hours.
“1 was also very nervous and
dizzy and was easily tired. I fin
ally got so weak I could not walk
any distance without resting. My
kidneys must have been affected
also, for I had severe pains in my
sides and back.
“My sister, Mrs. Minnie Hall,
came to see me one day and she
looked so well I asked her what
she had been taking. She told me
Tanlac, and I made up my mind
right then and there to give it a
trial.
“Acting on her advice, I bought
a bottle and have been taking it
regularly since. Of course I ex
pected it to help me, but if anyone
had told me that there was a med
icine on earth that would have
helped me like Tanlac 1 would not
have believed them.
“The medicine seemed to be just
the one thing I needed, for it just
filled me with new life and energy
from the very first dose. In only
a few days my appetite returned
and l began to enjov my' meals
and everything seemed to argee
with me.
“I am no longer nervous and
dizzy-headed like I was and can
now sleep like a child. In fact, I
feel just like a person who had
been made all over again. I hope
every suffering woman will hear
about.”
Tanlac is sold exclusively in Mc-
Donough by the McDonough Drug
Co; in Hampton, Go., bv H. A.
Moore, and Pinson’s Pharmacy
Stockbridge, Ga.,
Plant Live Oak Trees.
The beautifying of the roads in
Southern Georgia is steadily go
ing forward. Water and live oak
trees have been planted in sixteen
miles of public roads in Ware
county. A tree planting associa
tion was organized four years ago,
under the direction of Mrs. John
Lott Walker, State chairman of
committee on old trails roads,
and the men and women of the
county have taken up the work of
planting and improving all the
highways leading out of Way
cross in a very enthusiastic way.
Last year 3,000 trees were planted
on the public roads.
Dalton Chapter
Marks Highway.
1 i|ij toiiowiiTg resolutions rutvc
I. lv* Lt i V Htv • /* v y fiMA* L W
T*!, LI, p Th/ltrac
* 1. i is. ' ‘ ' .. *ll* J I . 1/il U, 1
Cimpte: 1) tu ill -r, of the Con
. the ivork of definitely locating and
1 suitably marking all such historic
i spots near by along the Dixie
| Highway.
2. That the marking be first on
boards of wood.
3. That a locating committee of
! three be appointed and a marking
committee of five be appointed,
| and that such committees proceed
at once with the work.
4. That a committee of three
| be appointed to take up this work
!in other counties in such way as
deemed best to secure the most
effective results.
The pigs in Georgia now num
ber over two million and repre
sent over $16,000,000, according
to fgures on live stock and crops
just prepared by the bureau of
crop statistics at Washington for
the Georgia chamber of com
merce, at the request of Hon. W.
J. Harris of the federal trade
commission. The figures show
that Georgia is advancing in all
kinds of live stock, but particu
larly in swine and beef cattle.
A speculator in another town
was telling his friends about his
dip into the New York Stock Ex
change. “Were you a bull or a
I bear?” the friend asked. “Nei
ther one; I was a jackass,” the
speculator feelingly replied. —La-
vonia Times.
Cut Your Store Bill
Down One Half
Tens of thousands of farmers as well as
town and city folks cut down their store
bills one-half last year and saved money
in spite of generally short crops and re
duced wages.
Absolutely millions of dollars were
saved and countless families lived better
than ever before in the face of the cotton
crisis and general business depression.
How were these burdensome store bills
cut down? By the real money-saving
power of good home .gardens, rightly
planted and kept planted* and tended
through the season.
Hastings 1016 Seed Catalogue tells how
to cut store bills down; tells about gar
den and farm seeds of kinds and a qual
ity that cannot be bought from your mer
chant or druggist. It's full of garden and
farm information. It’s free if you ask
f'r it. Write for it now. H. G. HASTINGS
CO., Atlanta, Ga.— (Advt.)
1). A. BROWN,
DENTIST
Office Hours :
7.30 to 12 A. M. be 5 P. M
TERMS: STRICTLY CASH.
McDonough, Ga.
Phone Main 678 M 2624-J Residence
Miss Lorah Q Allen
WITH
JAMES & NOLAN
Jewelers
Diamonds. Watches. Clocks, Cut
Glass and Silverware
318 Atlanta National Bank Building
Watch. Clock and Jewelry repair
ing a specialty. All kinds of plain
and Diamond Jewelry made to or
der. Engraving. Optical Work. —
Engraved Wedding Invitations.
Corner Whitehall and Alabama Sts.
LEGAL NOTICES.
For Twelve Month*' Support.
Gt-OROJA—Hi m-\ Li ; ■ v.
Mn- .vj.i-n! \\ a! . uni,- irpHwt
sm*-‘ ff“ Tv, ■ > ' J;h
A ■ *TT fTI iii V f ( •> l ' • 5* ?K3l o*
V . • ;> v •-.!.• A b ‘ m tin-
Oh t- hwtis.; liml’ S'.s neiif file tovSrn of
, J , , , , , \i . ~ • .
luntila' d 'll) the stnith liy tli ■ \loD'ir»-,tuh
ami H -tnpf'iii tout!, ur> rhoutr.tl uorth
by on iwfi b Nuthjwiiel An-h.r.
Said hftiise ami lot m lnz fht- property of
of ih»‘ of O• If.riiitiii. (h-Ei iii-r:..
.A. C. UAH HAM, Ac ;'t- d»- ! uis non.
For Dismlssioa.
< 1 KOtUilA—Honry County.
-\\’hFr.-QF J.,, f) fTirrb; i_»\vor mlmirGlra
:or of Mrs, L. A -* llioft,. rvprv-i-1• t- to th<-
i-.iiit-i in liis poMtlon, duly fllyi'!
<-d on l-ooord. that h<- has fully mlminis
: /-< <1 Mrs. I. A. KJliotr's i-stcito:
This is, therefore, to oitt- all persons
t-onoerni d, kinilretl and t-t-editors, ro show
cause, if any i hej 7 nan. why said adminis
tratoi- sin aid not be disoharoed from his
administration, and rm-eive Letters of
Dismission on tne First Monday in Feb
ruary, 1916.
A. G. HARRIS, Ordinary.
For Dismission.
( i EORGIA—Henry County.
Whereas, E. D. Tolleson, administrator
of Sam Hightower, represents to the
court in his petition, duly filed and enter
ed on record, that he has fully adminis
tered his estate:
This is, therefore, to cite aU persons
concerned, kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can, why said adminis
trator should not be discharged from his
adminiserafcion, and receive Letters of
Dismission on the First Monday in Feb
ruary, 1916.
A G. HARRIS. Ordinary.
For Dismission.
GEORGIA—Henry Countv.
Whereas. S. C. McWilliams, executor of
P E. McWilliams, represents to*the court
in his petition, duly filed and entered on
record, that he has fully administered P.
E. McWilliams’estate:
This is, therefore, to cite all persons
concerned, kindred and creditors, to
show cause, if any they can, why said
administration should not be discharged
from his administration, and receive Let
tors ot Dissmision on the First Monday in
February, 1916.
A. G. HARRIS. Ordinary.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
*’"£**"
Signature of
The Southern Mortgage Co.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $300,000
Established 870. ould Building —10 Decatur Street—9 lEdgewood Avenue.
FARM LOANS ~ T .
Negotiated throughout the State on Improved Farm Lands in sums
ot si,ooo to SIOO,OOO on Five Years’ time at reasonable rates. Our sources
ot money are practically inexhaustible. We have a strong line ot customers
among individual investors and Savings Banks and Trust Companies in the North,
East and Middle West, and we number among our customers the
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
with assets ot more than a hundred million dollars.
J. T. Holleman, President W. A. Thompson, Abstracts of Title
W. L. Kemp, Vice-President J> G. Work, Abstracts of Title
J. W. Andrews, Secretary Jy A. Boulighny, Auditor
F V Carter Attorney S' R ' £°° k ’ Secretar V s Clerk
» arter ’ Altorne - T. B. Dempsev, Abstract Clerk
A, d Antignac, Inspector C. W. Felker, Jr., Abstract Clerk.
W. A. Howell, Abstracts of Title Horace Holleman, Application Cle r k.
For intormation, call on or write to
Brown and Brown,
M’DONOUGH, GEORGIA.
“TWO ALL STEEL TRAINS TO®
rMn lj | q
iwl SL itfs r n 1 O
Leave Atlanta 6:25 a. 5:15 p. m.
Arrive Memphis 8.00 p. m. 7;30 a. m.
:S :'■"! thrrtnrh trains rf.-revimt Dnnug: t ars. Aioepuix Cu r»,
Diy Coaches. Direct connections -sr Memphis for poinls in
Arkansas, Missouri and Texas
ik L. BAY LOR, D P. A,, ATj.AhTA.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Jm ’ ’A. Ie
Wafers'?— rQ&St™* . i
il l XWw Come :
Msi# Wis mr w c
at once!
j my horse is sick.
Prompt attention must be giv*
en ailing stock so that farm work may not be delayed.
Bell Telephone Service on the farm enables you
to get the veterinary quickly.
It also keeps you in touch with the markets and
your neighbors.
If there is no telephone on your farm write to
day for our Free Booklet.
Address:-
, 'V <
* J
Farmers’ Line Department.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY ujpll