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Those Good Old Days.
We have no patience with that
-class of people who are always
grouching about the good old days
of long ago. Every age has its
favorable and unfavorable condi
tions, and the tunes in which we
Jive, have lived and which are to
come, have now, have had, and
•will have their bitter and sweet. —
ILaGrangc Graphic.
We are longing for the good
old days when one suit of clothes
lasted a year tor good wear,, and
two more fur every day wear.
The community worked ten hours
.and went to a spending, and old
and young danced till the chickens
quit their roost. They had no
■“brain storms” or heart aches or
appendicitis. Brain storms were
cured with a good hickory slick;
heart failure was called fits, and
apuendicitis was called bellyache.
They rolled the patient on a bar
rel, or rubbed him with a hot
brick; and no one knew that he
had a vermiform dorflicker that
vv is tickled to get full of grape
seed. We used to eat soup and
have “sass” of all kinds; now we
eat fruit salad and consomme and
have biscuit made of baking pow
der that look as if some one had
sat on them. We had bread with
“rising” that smelled like a glue
factory when it was rising, but
tasted better than anything made
of self-rising flour. And if the
girls chewed gum they had to
climb a sweetguin tree and dig it
out with a screw driver or ten
pendy nail.
Progrt ss don’t always mean bet
terment. Those pioneers were as
happy as anybody on earth. They
needed less than a quarter of the
luxuries of today and six times the
necessities. They took no stock
in this durn “progressive democra
cy.” The originial was good
enough. A man’s word was his
bond. They women didn’t know
anything about short dresses or
gowns with ribbon for sleeves. —
Greensboro Herald-Journal.
Whole Corn Meal
Whv not you make it instead of
buying it ?
It is composed of all the corn
and cobs.
You are paying the other fellow
about $45 to $5O per ton for his
cobs and throwing yours away.
Is there business in it?
It will pay you to have your
corn ground whole as all the cobs
have a certain amount of nutri
ment in them, but admitting there
should be none it will act as a fill
er or roughage for stock. *
This whole meal with velvet
bean meal will make the finest
feed possible.
Corn reduced to meal is much
more wholesome to stock and
more easily assimilated and taken
up by the glands in their diges
tion, thereby fattening and im
proving your stock at less cost be
c use all the food is appropriated
to their system, whereas with be
ing ground thousands of heat and
nutritive units are thrown off as
waste.
Ibis is a matter of economy in
feeding stock with an apparent
initial cost, which is more than
compensated by the digestive or
gans in their assimilation.
Try it!
Now is the time to paint and fix
up and make home look as if
there was a little enterprise about
you. Take the garden rake and
collect all the old rubbish of 1917
in a pile and set fire to it —don’t
burn the house down—and let it
be burned up and never collect
there again. Then go for that
pile, remove it Jar hence so that
your yard will look as though
some one were living there. No
place like home, therefore make it
beautiful, enchanting, and your at
tachments for it will be much the
stronger.
U Reasons,! k
Ik | Why you should use
Cardui, the woman’s |w
tonic, for your troubles, l
| have been shown in
thousands of letters from
actual users of this medi- L
tk I cine, who speak from
personal experience. If
the results obtained by L
l other women for so many
M years have been so uni-
formly good, why not 1
k I give Cardui a trial?
Take
CARDUI
~ The Woman’s Tonic .
Mrs. Mary J. Irvin, of
Cullen, Va., writes:
“About 11 years ago, I
suffered untold misery
with female trouble, bear-
ing-down pains, head- |k
ache, numbness ... I
would go for three weeks
almost bent double ...
My husband went to Dr.
After taking about two
W | bottles 1 began going
around and when I took
three bottles I could do
nJ all my work.” E-80
Petition for Charter.
GE< )RG-I A II on tv County.
To the Superior Court of said
county: The petition of H. M.
Amis and it. H. Daniel of sttid
State and county respectfully
shows :
1 That they desire for them
selves, their associates, successors
and assigns to he incorporated un
der the name and style of
THE AMIS-DANIEL COMPANY.
2 They desire to he incorporat
ed for a period of twenty years
with the privilege of renewal at
the expiration of that time.
it Tiie principal office and place
of business of said corporation will
be at McDonough, in said State and
county, bbt they desire the right
to establish branch offices any
where in this State.
4 The capital stock of said cor
poration will be five thousand dol
lars, divided into shares of the par
value of one hundred dollars each.
They desire the right to increase
said amount of capital stock from
time to time to a maximum of fif
teen thousand dollars. All of said
capital stock has be o n actually paid
in
5 The object of said corporation
is pecuniary gain to itself and
stock! i Iders.
ti The particular business to he
carried on by said corporation is
that of a general automobile busi
ness, buying and selling automo
biles, accessories, parts, gasoline,
oils and any and everything neces
sary and incidental to the automo
bile business. They desire to do a
general automobile repair business
and to run an automobile hack and
dray line.
7 In the conduct, of said busi
ness they desire the right to buy
and sell for cash or credit, to make
and take deeds, notes, bonds and
any and all other kinds of security,
to buy, hold, lease, sell, rent and
convey real estate and personal
property, to sue and be sued, to
have and use a common seal, to
make all necessary by laws, rules
and regulations for the successful
conduct of the business proposed
or that may he necessary for the
carrying on of said business.
8 They ask for the further right
to apply for and accept ammend
ments to the charter of said corpo
ration as provided by law, and for
the light and authority for said
corporation to wind up its affairs,
liquidate its business and surren
der its charter whenever it may bv
appjopriate resolution, desire to do
so.
Therefore, petitioners pray to be
incorporated under the name and
style a fores* id, with the powers,
privileg* s and immunities Lerein
set foortli and allowed by the laws
of Georgia, and subject, to the lia
bilities and restrictions placed up
on corporations by the laws of
j Georgia. E. M. SMITH,
Petitioners Attorney.
State of Georgia—Hems County.
I, FI. C. Hightower, Clerk of the
Superior Court in and for said
county, do hereby certify that the
foregoing is a correct copy of peti
tion filed by H. M. Amis and R. H.
Daniel in this office, to be incor
porated as THE AMIS DANIEL
COMPANY, as will appear from
the records in tins office.
Given under my hand and seal,
this the 14th dav of November
1917. H. C. HIGHTOWER,
C. S. C H. C., Ga.
ip
AM ¥? M IM 1?
± j&. IN JlJ j i. \t ii Jl ’i ft s j
YOU’LL NEVER FORGET
The greet Chalmers en r no*:.' feet::ring t u ~ cur
rent Chalmers car, arrive.: a rare time in history.
With war on, and gasoLne in v::e new as never
before, there has been one result evident probably to
most every man that drives a car—the rapid decline in
the grade of gasoline.
Engii leers never expect to see a high-grad e gas again.
In the face ol tlvs coed i non now ca nes the rr eat
Chalmers engine, which makes k’p'h power out ot low
grade gas.
It makes h:ac ciron oT'v : rrvdo the work of two.”
L «V?
It makes gasoline work .s gasoline has ne, er worked
in an automob !e engine before.
. j
By means of an ingenious device known as a “hot
spot,” the gas, after fs.rrir ih cr rburetor, is warmed
up (but not overheated) just be, .er j the intake
mam to Id.
Fhen by means of another -in genious device known
as a c *ram’s-horn” mam old it is skillfully passed on to
the engine’ combustion chamber.
I'he secret here is in what are known as “easy air
bends.”
The result is th ! t at the time when the gas is
touched off by tf ; s; er: plug it is “cracked up” into a
perfect vapor for iOO % results.
This device \v oa ticular is one of the most notable
A
achievements in automobile engineer::::: in many years.
Is or only do these improvements on the engine
create more powe; our of less gas, but they also make
possible a quid ; virting engine on a cold day.
When you step on die starter button in a current
Chalmers, you get results ngh- off. And your engine
begins to run with smoothness— no miss
ing cylinders—no spitting—no hesitating —no backfire.
So noteworthy is this great Chalmers engine that
one is tempted to overlook other notable improve
ments and perfections in the current Chalmers.
They are numberless, and once evident to the eye
of a wise buyer, they win him.
To miss seeing the current Chalmers at our show
rooms is to miss the most recent and most taiked-of
car of the day.
TOURING CAR, 7-PASSENGER $1450 TOURING SEDAN - - - SIBSO TOWN CAR LANDAULET $3025
TOURING CAR, 5-PASSENGER $1365 CABRIOLET, 3-PASSENGBR $1625 LIMOUSINE, 7-PASSENGER $2925
STANDARD ROADSTER - $1365 TOWN CAR, 7-PASSENGER $2925 LIMOUSINE LANDAULET $3025
v ALL PRICES F. O. B. DETROIT SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
C. L. FARRIS, AGENT, McDQNOUGH, GEORGIA