The Henry County weekly. (McDonough, GA.) 18??-1934, September 19, 1919, Image 3

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    AS STRONG AS
AT SEVENTEEN
2IRON Iron Tonic Makes Her “Old Man”
Feel Young Again, Says Daughter.
To help repair the results of illness,
Oid age, work and worry in your daily
life; to help give strength to your run
down system and to help renew fagged
forces and tone up the nerves—you will
find a valuable remedy in Ziron.
Head what Ziron did for an old man,
who had to stay in bed most of the time!
His daughier, Myrtle Mills, of Pulaski,
Tenn., says: “Ziron has helped mv
father wonderfully. He could not dc
anything before taking it. He was in bed
most of the time, complaining with bro
ken-down nerves and backache. He has
taken three bottles and says he is as
strong as when he was 17 years old.”
If your blood needs iron, try Ziron
Iron Tonic. What it has done for oth
ers, it may do for you.
Ziron is mild, harmless; does not dis
color the teeth, ard may be taken safely
by young and old, men, women and
children.
Get Ziron at you; druggist's, under a
money-back guarantee.
ZN9
Nbur Blood Needs
Keep Well
Do not allow the
poisons of undigested
food to accumulate in
your bowels, where they
are absorbed into your
system. Indigestion, con
stipation, headache, bad
blood, and numerous
other troubles are bound
to follow. Keep your
system clean, as thous
ands of others do, by
taking an occasional dose
of the old, reliable, veg
etable, family liver medi
cine.
Thedford’s
Mrs. W. F. Pickle, of
Rising Fawn, 03., writes:
“We have used Thed
ford’s Black-Draught as
a family medicine. My
mother-in-law could not
take calomel as it seemed
too strong ior her, so she
used Black-Draughtasa
mild laxative and liver
regulator .. . We use it
in the family and believe
it is the best medicine for
the liver made.” Try it.
Insist on the genuine—
Thedford’s. 25c a pack
age. E-75
**■ r r T'3nio QuSnino^^
*' '** e£otvs
mm a I
andruff,foed3t!i3 roots of |
■=« u crow lonj, Boft and |
das WGcbim.
it cf r tamps or com. E
.verywhere I
For »‘»ar+«rsilarrj
medicine company
Ga.
ciu'uueauu 555553bmK-BESi
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA— Henry County.
Ry virtue of tin order from the
Court of Ordinary, will be sold
before the court house door in Mc-
Donough, G«., within the legal
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday
in October, 1919, the following
described land belonging to the
estate of Moses Hooten, deceased,
lying in Bt*rslieba District of said
county and bounded as follows:
North and East by land of John
pjveis; West by Chas. Jeffries,
and South by Bob Banks. Sold
for distribution.
D. B. MORGAN.
Administrator.
For Sale.
127 acres good land one mile of
Hampton on good road with ex
cellent improvements.
Address Hampton, Ga., K. r. D.
box 65.
Back to School Drive.
While we are enjoying a much
needed rest during the warm
weather and vacation time, let us
not lose sight of the fact that we
should be thinking, talking and
stressing the “Back to school
drive” before the Fall-term ar
rives.
As never before, we realize that
education is paramount. As Com
missioner Claxton says, there can
be no freedom without the educa
tion of man, and in a Democracy
all things wait upon 'education.
In a few years from now, the boys
and girls of today will be taking
up the social, civic and economic
problems, and must needs be pre
pared to do so capably —more
capably than could we of today,
for mattgjAS become ever more in
creasingly complex. Our educa
tional advantages must be con
stantly strengthened; our methods
improved.
The Duty of Parents.
Parents must insist upon their
children securing an education.
They must realize that nothing is
gained by allowing a chiid to leave
school when young, going out in
to the world as a wage-earner
when he is incapacitated to do
any but menial work. We should
compel parents to educate their
children. By so doing we are
strengthening and enriching our
country.
. Children cannot be expected to
realize that it is to their best in
terest to go on to High School
when they leave the elementary
school, and so it becomes the duty
STRAW jyjm W It is Cold
Clear Through ml
heated glass to Itake the
I|m 4 k took, 'throuih a straw— taken »
from its bed of crushed ice. It
our Soldiers an j Sailors a
T"~' - -ft- '
HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY. McDONOUGH GEORGIA
!of the parent, the teacher and of
the Parent-Teacher Association to
encourage them to supplement
their grammar school education
with that of the High School.
It Pays to Stay in School.
Figures compiled by the Nation
al Child Labor Committee show
the slow rise of the untrained
worker in comparison to that of
the trained worker graduates
from the High Schools.
These statistics show that pupils
from the elementary schools gen
erally begin work at 14 years of
age, at an average of only $4.00
per week, and at 18 are earning
only $7.00 per week. Their rise
is slow and at from 25 to 30
years of age only $13.75 per week
is averaged.
Whereas graduates from High
School, beginning work at 18 and
having a greater earning power
through a more complete educa
tion, starts at $lO 00 per week,
rising >o an average of $31.00 per
week by the time the elementary
For Men Working Hard.
Factory workers, railroid men,
farmers, miners, mill employees
and all men who work at hard,
straining physical labor are,more
or less subject to kidney trouble.
Nature gives warning by frequent
lameness, stiff joints, sore muscles,
backache and rheumatic pains.
J. G. Wolf, Green Bay, Wis,
writes: “Foley Kidney Pills re
lieved me of a severe backache,
that had bothered me for several
months. A few boxes fixed me
up in good shape.” McDonough
Drug Co.
pupil earns less than half this
amount.
Statistics in Georgia show that
some five hundred thousand chil
dren drop out of school before
they reach High School. In fact,
46 per cent of the white children
drop out of grammar school be
fore they reach tiie fourth grade,
and/ only 30 per cent remain
throughout the entire grammar
grades. Only one out of three
enters High School and only one
out of nine graduates.
Among the negro children 70
per cent drop out at the end of
the fourth grade and only a bare
5 per cent get through the gram
mar school. —School and Home.
Life is just a continuous grab
for one dollar after another. And
with some of us there is an agon
izing difference between grabbing
and getting.
Despondency.
Sufferers from indigestion are
apt to become discouraged and feel
that complete recovery is not to be
hoped for. No one could make a
greater mistake. Hundreds have
been permanently cured bv taking
Chamberlain's Tablets and can now
eat anything that they crave.
These tablets strengthen the stom
and enable it. to perform its func
tions naturally. If you have not
tried them do so at once. For sale
by Horton Drug Co
BROWN & BROWIN
Attorneys at Law
McDonough, Ga.
Call or write us for farm loans.
“SUCCESS”
By OMA TAHPLF.Y.
Everyone, little or big, old or
young, loves success. The road
to success is rough. Sometimes
the wayfarer becomes so discour
aged and fatigued the he falls by
the way, only to rise and go strug
gling on to his goal. O success
mav be compared with the top
most wrung of a Sadder. The am
bitious person sets his foot firmly
on the bottom wrung, and with
hands clinging to the highest one
within his reach, he climbs ud
warp.
Either way —the road or the
ladder —is not child’s play. It is
not easy to keep one’s face turned
straight ahead, eyes set upon a
distant, invisible goal. But for
each one of us there is a goal.
We may, never h ive reached it
nor may never summon up the
courage to reach it. Just the
same, the goal is there.
Success does not come to the
idler and it should net. It has to
be toiled for with long years of
hardships and suffering, either
mental or physical —perhaps both.
To be successful there are two
essential steps. First: Know what
you want to do. Second : Then
do it.
Our life work should be decided
upon at an early age. Select
something suited to your liking
and then allow nothing to stand
in your way of success along this
particular line.
Although there may be barriers
that would hinder your progress,
learn to surmount each difficulty.
Smile, even it be a forced one.
Success and smiles go hand in
hand, and when Dame F *rtune
sees you have the courage to plug
aheid day after day and the grit
to smile she will not be long in
ha nding over the laurels of success.