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lomel danger
told BY DODSON
yr.u a day! You know
, Li | 0 cp S It's mercury; quick
is. dangerous. It
i'tour Voinel is dynamite
bile like
d sickening you. Calomel
and should never be
ie bones
land ! Z bilious, knocked Sluggish out and
ah
I: D eed a dose of dangerous
' remember that your drug
t large bot
ion's for a few cents a
Liver Tone, which is
ZEHA!
Ln't L one of those fake many free times treatment We
V ou have seen so
' r to give you something for nothing—
Bo guarantee that you can try this won
L Eeatraent, backed entirely by your at local our risk, druggist. and this
is
L ma i;es the oiler one which you can with ab
I depend upon, because the druggist
lou have been trading would not stand
1 guarantee if he did not know it to be
■tile . gutuuuivv * * — — —
1st [it’s and 1 legitimate i one. nnh
Salve, formerly called Hunt's Cure,
|a sold under absolute money back guar
|r more than thirty years. It is especially
Lied Lorm, for the treatment of itching Eczema, skin Itch, dis
Tetter, and other
Lnsands of letters testify Durant, to its curative Oklahoma, properties. “I M. suffered Tircierlin, with a
le dry goods dealer in says:
for ten years, and spent $1,000.00 for doctors’ treatments, without
| one box of Hunt's Cure entirely cured me.”
B’t fail to give Hunt’s Salve a trial—price 75 cents, from your local
t, or direct by mail if he does not handle it.
RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Texas
|G A LITTLE TOO MUCH
[the Circumstances Actor Was
tetified in Refusing Parts
[Manager Allotted Him.
Ig to the limitations of his
[the bn manager traveled of a theatrical with
the road a
Jompany.
afternoon he called one of his
to him and remarked :
p; here, Wellington, you’ll have
three parts tomorrow night in
Bilent Foe’—Henderson, Uncle
pd the Spider.’’
do it!" retorted Wellington,
but firmly.
P’t do It? Won’t do it, you
snorted the manager. “Why
you do it?”
pause it can't be done. No hu
jeing could play these three parts
[same time. In the third act Hen
and the Spider have a fight
Id Uncle Bill rushes in to sep
(them.”
nenities of Trolley Travel. :
tdon me for bumping into you
F n ,’ s aid the polite straphanger.
|e swaying of the car.”
ln’t mention it,” said his equally
1 fellow straphanger. “But par
r for turning my left side toward
telbow. I was recently operated
f appendicitis.”
! trouble with good advice is that
[ us recognize it when we hear
asionally a man discovers that
I s a friend who is a friend.
Try Postum
Instead of Coffee
at the family table for a week
or two and see if everyone
doesn’t relish the change.
Postum Cereal
a drink of delicious flavor
—* should be boiled fully
fifteen minutes to bring
out its full-bodied richness.
Better health and comfort
from usually follow a change
coffee to Postum.
There’s a Reason”
Mad *by POSTUM CEREAL CO., Inc.. Batt Creek. Mich.
,
entirely vegetable and pleasant to
take and is a perfect substitute for
calomel. It is guaranteed to start your
liver without stirring you up inside,
and can not salivate.
Don’t take calomel! It can not be
trusted any more than a leopard or
a wild cat. Take Dodson's Liver Tone,
which straightens you right up and
makes you feel fine. Give it to the
children because it is perfectly harm
lens: and doesn't gripe.—Adv.
Willing Clerk.
He was strictly opposed to doctors
and medicine, proclaiming the doc¬
trine that fresh air, pure water and
plenty of exercise could cure nil ills,
even to smallpox. He walked breezily
into a downtown drug store and
waved his hand at one of the shelves.
"There,” he said in a tone loud)
enough for all the real and prospec¬
tive customers to hear him, “there is
enough poison to kill all the people
in Indianapolis.”
• The clerk who was nearest studied
a minute. Then he said courteously:
“Yes, and how would you prefer to
have your share?”—Indianapolis
News.
Foolproof.
“Henry, an agent came to the house
this morning with a new kind of can
opener to sell.”
“Well?”
“He said it was foolproof.”
“All! That's pretty good. Any
brainless woman can use it, eh?”
“Perhaps. But the point he made
was that husbands’who open cans for
their wives can do so without cutting
their fingers, spoiling the oilcloth on
the kitchen table, spattering the walls
with gore and shocking the neighbors
with profanity,” — Birmingham Age
Herald.
It is as difficult to get some men to
talk as it is to get some women- to
quit.
If you want your wife to do a thing
just tell hef you won’t permit it.
Heal velvet is made entirely of silk.
THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, GEORGIA.
WHEN MILADY DECIDES
TO OBEY CONVENTION
fei; I.
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17' VERY girl with an imagination has
Jfe pictured the dawn of the honey¬
moon!. with herself a radiant bride in
ail the glory of white satin and tulle.
And when dreams come true and she
decides to obey convention there has
never y^t been a defsVth of satin or
tulle, all ready to be used. But how?
That is the question that fairly ob¬
sesses the bride and all her women
relatives until it is settled. What the
bride requires of the creator of her
conventional wedding gown is that it
must be conventional but in an origi¬
nal way—there are ways of doing
things—new ways—that insure an up
to-date result. Each year’s wedding
gowns are tests of ingenuity on the
part of their designers, masterpieces
into which they weave the old and new
with consummate artistry.
This year's gowns have provided its
brides with a choice of styles swinging
all the way from straight lines to the
most elaborate draping, and, about
midway between these extremes are
such lovely examples of the conven¬
tional wedding gown as that shown
in the picture. The bride that is fairly
slender and tall will dote on this in¬
terpretation of current ideas. The
dress shows the skirt, with a draped
Alluring Midsummer Hats
I
ctttHEN your path feuds past the
W milliner’s show window, be sure
you will linger in front of it—for that
way temptation lies. Only midsum¬
mer could call forth such alluring
headwear as that which causes the
strongest minded among us to hesi¬
tate at the place where it is displayed,
when we should be moving on. It ap¬
pears that the very best things which
the year has to offer have been saved
for this particular time, and the
chances are that some hit of irresisti¬
ble art, in dress or sport hat. will part
the unwary—but wise—onlooker from
some of her money. The career of the
midsummer hat is brief and glorious,
and we might as well reckon with it,
for it wifi reappear with early June.
Three of these adorable hats, shown
In the group pictured here, will sug¬
gest appropriate styles for brides¬
maids. or mauls of honor. These mid¬
summer hats are •cry often made of
mplines and hair braid, but sometimes
of silk or straw braid or of georgette
crepe and other sheer stuffs. One of
the hats pictured is a twine-colored
braid faced with pale rose georgette,
and a wreath of roses and foliage
trails about its course.
A lovely hat of black hair braid and
malines might be made up in brown,
or for a bridesmaid^ in a light color,
ft has a scarf of malines, to he
brought about the throat, and long¬
stemmed rosebuds falling from the
oock.
tunic at the front, made in one with
the bodice. It contrives to reconcile
the smart ankle length of this season’s
skirts with a long train—which accom¬
plishment is not without difficulties.
The satin bodice has a square neck
which the bride may choose to fill in
with a guiinpe of filmy laeg or net, or
wear as it is, since her throat is cov¬
ered by a scarf of tulle—part of the
very interesting arrangement of the
most voluminous of wedding veils.
The veil falls from a cap which has
a puff of tulle for its crown and a
band of orange blossoms that form a
heavy wreath with long, slender sprays
falling at each side. These trailing
sprays have appeared in other arrange¬
ments of the cap this season. All the
tulle that can be put into a veil envel¬
ops the bride in this stately costume
and perhaps this accounts for the pearl
beads that outline the square neck
opening and emphasize it. Jewelry
has been conspicuous by its absence in
the costumes of this year’s brides, but
a necklace of pearls has always been
allowed and one is worn in this in¬
stance. If “pearls are for tears” the
bride, being a very modern and up-to
date young woman, has decided to defy
fate.
Another hat of hair braid with a
crown of braid and malines, supports
a wreath of mixed flowers, roses and
lilies of the valley, that are. as natu¬
ral as life. This is very lovely in
gray or brown, and is good in black.
In light colors it is an ideal hat for
the maid or matron of honor or for
bridesmaids. There are many beauti¬
ful, light-colored braids among these
glofies of summer millinery, but it is,
more than anything else, the charm
of flower trimming that proves cap¬
tivating.
Sweater an Absolute Necessity.
Summer sports und tip? vacation pe¬
riod make the sweater an absolute ne¬
cessity and no amount of sport coats,
no matter how attractive and smart
they may be, can oust this very use¬
ful and becoming garment. At least
a sweater may be becoming if it Is
well made. Many of them are hope¬
lessly otherwise.
Silk Coats.
Silk coats, following the lines of the
figure as well as to give the impres¬
sion at first glance that they are
dresses, are among the spring novel¬
ties.
<LJ\ j! fe fe-fefefe..;, VI
fe (4%
“Hurry, Baby Has the Colic”
Don’t take andsuffer—use dangerous chances by letting baby
fret, cry the safest proven remedy jSSSSi
for colicky or teething babies.
MRS.WINSLOWS
SYRUP
The Infants’ and Children's Regulator
It qnickly aids baby’s stomach to digest food as it should and
keepa the bowels open, brings surprisingly quick relief from
colic, diarrhoea, constipation, flatulency and other similar
troubles.
Made of purely vegetable ingredients, guaranteed to contain ?/A
no narcotics, opiates, alcohol nor anything" harmful. This
complete, open published formula appear* on every label:
Senna Sodium Citrate Oil of Anise Careway Glycerine s
Rhubarb Sodium Bicarbonate Fennel Coriander Sugar Syrup
At All Drusrgists
ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO., 215-217 Fulton Street, New York
General Selling Agents: Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc#
New York London Toronto
Didn’t Rest Weir
Prominent Georgia Lady Suffered From Faint Spells
and Sleeplessness—Relieved by Ziron.
tvEOPLE who get to feeling weak
jT every now and the then, and who refresh¬ do
not seem to get proper
ment from rest, sleep and recreation,
need a tonic to help their blood revital¬
ize and build up their system.
For this, you will find Ziron Iron
Tonic very valuable, as the testimony
of thousands already has proved. Mrs.
J. W. Dysart, lady of a prominent
Georgia family residing near Carters
ville, says:
“I didn’t feel like myself. »
It’s a pity that more of us are not
willing to follow the advice we give
to others.
For more than Forty Years
Cotton Growers have known that
POTASH PAYS
More than 11,651,200 Tons of Potash Salts
had been imported and used in the United
States in the 20 years previous to January,
1915, when shipments ceased. Of this
6,460,700 Tons consisted of
KAINIT
which the cotton grower knew was both a
plant fodti and a preventive of blight and
rust,-*with it came also 1,312,400 Tons of
20 per cent
MANURE SALT
which has the same effects on Cotton, but which
was used mainly in mixed fertilizers.
Shipments of both Kainit and Manure Salt have
been resumed but the shortage of coal and cars and
high freight rates make it more desirable to ship
Manure Salt, which contains 20 per cent of actual
Potash , instead of Kainit, which contains less than
13 per cent actual Potash.
MANURE SALT can be used as a side dressing
on Cotton in just the same way as Kainit and will
give the same results. Where you used 100 pounds
of Kainit, you need to use but 62 pounds of Manure
Salt, or 100 pounds of Manure Salt go as far as 161
pounds of Kainit.
, MANURE SALT has been coming forward in
considerable amounts and cotton growers, who can¬
not secure Kainit, should make an effort to get
Manure Salt for side dressing to aid in making a
big Cotton Crop.
Muriate of Potash
50 per cent actual Potash, has been coming forward
also,—100 pounds of Muriate are equivalent to 400
pounds of Kainit or 250 pounds of Manure Salt.
These are the three
Standard GERMAN Potash Salts
that were always used in making cotton fertilizers
and have been used for all these years with great
profit and without any damage to the crop.
The supply is not at present as large as in former
years, but there is enough to greatly increase the
Cotton Crop if you insist on your dealer making
the necessary effort to get it for you.
DO IT NOW
Soil and Crop Service Potash
Syndicate
H. A. Huston, Manager
42 Broadway New York
“I didn’t rest well some nights. X
would be just as tired when I got up
in the morning as when I went to
bed. I would get weak, and have kind
of fainty spells—at times hardly able
to do my housework.
“I heard of Ziron, and felt maybO
a tonic would help me. I thought It
would at least strengthen me.
“I believe Ziron has clone mb good,
I feel better. I am glad to recommend
it as a good tonic.”
Try Ziron. Our money-back guaran¬
tee protects you. At your druggist's.
Honestly, don’t you believe that all
people who do not agree With you are
wrong?