Newspaper Page Text
Habitual Constipation Cured
in 14 to 21 Days
“UVX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially
■prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
Constipation. It relieves promptly but
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days
•as Induce regular action. It Stimulates and
Regulates. , Very Pleasant to Take. * 60c
•per bottle.
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cored
ajr local applications, as they cannot
•reach the diseased portion of the ear.
•Catarrhal Deafness requires conatttu
cjonal treatment. HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE is a constitutional remedy.
•Catarrhal Deafness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is
ntlamed you have a rumbling sound or
mperfect hearing, and when it is entire
ly closed Deafness is the result. Unless
•the inflammation can be reduced, your
shearing may be destroyed forever.
WALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acts
through the blood on the mucous sur
faces of the system, thus reducing the in
flammation and restoring normal condi
tions
Circulars free. All Druggists.
K. X Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Is Your Health Slowly
Slipping Away?
Then You Shou a c mu the Cause and
. r- Correct It. I
Is failing health making you unease '
and unhappy? Are you tired, weak
and dispirited? Suffer daily backache
and stabbing, rheumatic twinges? j
Then look to your kidneys! The kid- j
neys are the blood-filters. Once they
weaken, the whole system is upset.
You have dizzy spells, headaches and
.urinary irregularities. You feci all |
worn-out. Use Doan’s Pills—a stim- j
ulant diuretic to the kidneys. Thou
sands recommend Doan’s. Here is
convincing proof:
A. R. Beding-feld, Glenville, Ga., J
tiays: “My kidneys acted irregularly !
and my back was sore and stiff. Some
times when I stooped, I could hardly .
straighten again. I got dizzy hoad- !
aches, too. Doan’s Pills rid me of the ;
trouble. Doan’s always fix me up in
fine shape.”
. 'Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t i
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get ;
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr.
Bedingfeld had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
JHfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
t
[BBBBBBBBBBBBBBaB
Blinding §
Headaches 1
"For about twenty years."
lys Mr. P. A. Walker, a well- H
lown citizen of Newburg, 9
y., "one of our family reme- J®
es has been Black-Draught, &
le old reliable. . . I use it B
>r colds, biliousness, sour F 5
:omach and indigestion. I 9
as subject to headaches w
lien my liver would get out S
l order. I would have 5g
lind i n g headaches and B
iuldn’t stoop about my work, E
ist couldn’t go. I used
I HUM'S \
BLACK-DRAUGHT
I and it relieved me. B
"About eight years ago my S 3
wife got down with liver and R
stomach trouble. .. We tried II
all week to help her, . . . but B
she didn’t get any better. IS
One day I said to the doctor, jfl |
‘I believe I will try Black- B j
Draught, it helps my liver.’ B
He said that I might try it ■
and to follow directions. ■
She was nauseated and N
couldn’t eat or rest. She be- H
gan taking Black-Draught I--
and in two days she was B
® greatly Improved and in a ®
■ week she was up.” *»
B " Try Black-Draught. It costs ■
B only one cent a dose. Sold ■
H everywhere. E9y S
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i: Phone Seven - Nine l
NEW !
• .
i; FOR YOUR
*> *
\\ :
ii Fresh Vegetables
=: and Groceries
: :
► <
► j
Better a wise enemy than a fool
friend.
“Thou shalt not steal” la a good
guide line for all.
One record not worth breaking Is
last year’s mark In automobile killings.
_______________
Alan Is old only when he lets go,
woman only when she grabs the steer
ing wheel.
A case of double Injury was that of
the New York restaurant patrons also
held up by bandits.
Where Is the male nowadays who
would ridicule woman’s style of using
the hair for earmufifs?
The chances are that the local smoke
law violators will only be Interested
in the Inspector’s call.
Coal prices slated to go up, says a
dispatch. If It Isn’t the prices that
are slated It’s the coal.
For the time being "fair and warm
er” Is far more Important than poli
tics or the Bok peace plan.
More difficult than captnrlng It must
have been the Mexican general’s at
tempt to spell Guadalajara.
There Is a glut of wheat, which
offers the only possible excuse for
burning the breakfast toast.
That Italian scientist who says he
can foretell earthquakes might try his
hand at political landslides.
Capital and labor divide the dough
nut The middle class is the one that
gets what was in the middle.
The fellow who Is trying to abolish
Adam and Eve would rob us of our
only excuse for being the way we are.
The man who robs the baby’s bank
partly has been located. He stole a
stamp-vending machine the other night.
A middle-of-the-road policy Is all
right, but It is apt to get one the repu
tation of a mad hog with his neigh
bors.
Considering the amount of paper
currency at large in the world, when
money talks nowadays It Is for publi
cation.
United States to chart Arctic, says
a dispatch, and next some enterpris
ing realty firm will be platting sub
divisions.
The Golden Rule Is another that
experiences a little difficulty now and
agqin in the matter of complete en
forcement.
If those 100,000-year-old dinosaur
eggs are still edible, we can probably
dig up some butter that will go well
with them.
f
CAST O R IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Signature of '/K
A. TONIC
Grave’s Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Bljod. When you feel its
strengthening, Invigorating effect, see how
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it. The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigor*
ating Effect. 60c
THE LYONS PROGRESS, LYONS, GEORGIA.
BouWeevil@hrcL
vMEYHODJ^
'TBk approved by v-jgr
/Tate Expert,/^
801 l weevils are greatly influenced
by weather conditions at all times of
ths year. The rate of increase in
the spring and summer depends on
climatic conditions as do the length
of time they remain In winter quar
ters, the death rate during the winter
and the time of coming from winter
quarter*.
By far the most important check
the weevil receives is dry weather
during June and July, it has been
found that In Texas and other West
ern states an average of about a
quarter of all the grubs in the fields
are killed by heat and dryness. If
the weather is sufficiently dry a wee
vil In a square which falls to the
ground Is soon killed by the heat or
by the fact that the square soon be
comes so dry that It does not furnish
suitable food. Even in raiien bolls
as many as ten out of a hundred of
the grubs are sometimes killed by
these conditions. The bolls which do
not fall to the ground do not become
a© heated as to affect the grubs.
In very dry weather, and especial
ly when the cotton plants are small
so there Is very little shade, even the
grown weevils are killed In a few
seconds when they happen to fall up
on the ground, provided they do not
fall In a place where they can crawl
Immediately upon some object from
which they can fly back to the cot
ton plant.
The seasons In which the boll wee
vil will always do the most damage
are those with much wet weather In
June and July and In such cases
efforts to check their progress and
rapid multiplication must be re
doubled and the fields watched closely
to determine the time for applications
of calcium arsenate in dust form.
The greatest movement of the wee
vils into winter quarters is when an
average temperature of 60 degrees
Is reached, especially if the nights
are cold and the days comparatively
warm. Under such conditions tKPre
Is a very noticeable activity on the
part of the weevils in the fields.
This generalfy takes place in Octo
ber and November and is a gradual
rather than a sudden movement.
The conditions most destructive to
she weevil in the winter are more or
less frequent changes from low to
high temperatures. A number erf
changes of this kind will kill many
more weevils than a very low temper
ature alone. During very warm spells
hi the winter the weevils are some
times found flying about. Activity of
this kind seems to weaken them and
when a cold spell comes they usually
cannot withstand it.
Further information may obtained
from the state college of agriculture.
Reduee the acreage and Increase
the per acre yield is one tray to beat
the boll weevil.
“We can if we will —we WILL cow
trcrl the weevil” by applying method*
of control approve' by state and gov*
ernment experts.
The boll weevil collects the profits
on the cotton crop* where proper
methods of control are rot applied.
More cotton to the acre, not more
acres to cotton, and weevil control
will put money in the bans ror
farmers.
‘Do it right or not at all,” say
boll weevil control authorities.
“We drove the automobiles out of
the Delta,” said the boll weevils, ‘ and
we can drive the farmers off the farms
if they don’t stop us scon.”
Save your money by saving your
cotton from the boll weevil.
Weevil control will help farmer*
who help themselves by using the
methods approved by THEIR experts.
Tests and experiments by experts
prove that it pays to apply cultural
methods of boll weevil control under
all conditions and calcium arsenate
in dust from where the soil will yield
as much as one third of a bale to the
acre.
Farmers should help their cotton
crops to early fruiting and maturity
before the boll weevils have had a
chance to destroy them by planting
selected seed and applying intensive
ultivation.
Ay-plications of calcium
dust Jorm should be made cm cotton
when 10 per cent of *fsi squares have
been punctured by boil weevils. From
five to seven pounds rsf poison shoulv
be used to the acre and the applies*
tlon should be repeated two or three
times at four and five day intervals.
Others have proved that boll weevil
control pays. Prove it yourself by
using government fnethods and check
the result on a small tract where con
trol measures are not used.
801 l weevils go into winter quarters
before frost occurs. Reduce the num
ber by burning trash and burying the
■talks as soon as the crop Is gathered.
Apply calcium arsenate in dust form
to boll weevil Infested cotton when tto
air and the plants are moist, perfe**
ably at night.
Ask your county agent or writs tho
state college of agriculture or the Na
tional 801 l Weevil Control Association.
Room 230 Whitney building. New Or
leans. La., about methods of boll wo*
vll eontrol.
Sunday School
' Lesson'
(By REV P. B FITZWATBR, D.D., Teacher
oC English Bible In the Moody Bible lnstl
tute of Chicago. I
(&■ 1924, Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for June 1
THE BABYLONIAN EXILE OF
JUDAH
LESSON TEXT—II Chron. 36:11-21.
GOLDEN TEXT—^'•Righteousness ex
alteth a nation: but sin is a reproach
to any people.”—Prov. 14:34.
PRIMARY TOPIC —What a Boy King
Did.
JUNIOR TOPIC—The Destruction of
Jerusalem.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—The Last Days of Jerusalem.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—A Nation In Ruins.
I. The Bins of the Nation (vv.
11-16).
1. Zedekiah, the King (vv. 11-13).
(1) Insubordination to God's prophet
(▼. 12). In the theocratic government
or Israel God’s prophet occupied a
higher place than the king himself.
The prophet was God’s messenger. In
stead of receiving Jeremiah as God’s
messenger and conforming his life to
God’s will, as made known by the
prophet be refused to humble him
self before God.
(2) Rebellion against Nebuchadnez
zar (v. 13). Zedekiah was made king
of Judah by the king of Babylon but,
in spite of this kindness and the word
of the Lord spoken to him by Jere
miah (Jer. 38:17, 18; 52:3), he re
belled against the king of Babylon.
(3) He stiffened his neck and
hardened his heart against God (v.
13) Those who rebel against rightly
constituted authority soon are resist
ing the will and grace of God.
2. The Priests and People (vv.
14-16).
(1) They followed the heathen (v.
14) Even the priests who ministered
in the house of God were practicing
the sins of the heathen nations sur
rounding them.
(2) They polluted the house of the
Lord (v. 14). The house of the Lord
was sacred, having been dedicated to
the Lord and consecrated to His serv
ice. For priests to officiate while liv
ing lives of impurity was pollution to
God’s house.
(3) They mocked God’s messengers
(v. 16). Instead of receiving them as
from God, they mocked them.
(4) They despised God’s word (v.
16). To set at naught God’s counsel
is to despise His word (Prov. 1:25).
(5) Misused God’s prophets (v. 16).
They not only mocked them but im
prisoned some and slew others. This
they persisted in until God could no
longer restrain His wrath.
11. The Judgment Falls (vv. 17-21).
1. Slaughter by the Sword (v. 17).
So severe did this Judgment fall that
the King of the Chaldees slew young
men even in the house of the sanctu
ary and "had no compassion upon
young man or maiden, old man or him
that stooped for age.”
2. The Treasures and Sacred Ves
sels Carried to Babylon (v. 18). This
included, not only the treasures of the
house of the Lord, but of the king and
his princes.
3. Burned the House of God (v. 19).
This was the sacred temple built by
Solomon with certain additions and
modifications.
4. Broke Down the Walls of Jerusa
lem (v. 19). The aim in this was to
render the walls useless as a means of
defense.
5. Burned the Palaces (v. 19). It
would seem that the common houses
were left for the poor people who re
mained in the land.
6. Destroyed All the Goodly Vessels
(v. 19). This would mean that the
palaces were plundered of all that was
valuable.
7. Carried the People Into Captivity
and Made Slaves of Them (v. 20).
Those who had escaped the sword
were now carried away and enslaved.
It would seem that a number of peo
ple had deserted to the Babylonians.
From IT Kings 25:12 we learn that
the poorest of the people w r ere left In
the land. Those who would not like
ly make any trouble were left as vine
dressers and husbandmen. Since the
custom was to colonize conquered ter
ritory by foreign peoples, the object
In leaving the poor people was that
the country might be ready and over
these people Gedaliah was appointed
with headqunrters at Mizpeh. When
the walls werd broken Zedekiah fled
by night, his object being doubtless to
cross the Jordan at Jericho and hide
In the mountains east of Jordan. He
was overtaken in the plains of Jericho
(II Kings 25:5) by the Chaldean
army. He was captured and taken to
the king of Babylon who was at Rib
lah, a town north of Damascus. Zede
kiah was tried before Nebuchadnez
zar. his eyes were put out, he was
bound with fetters of brass, and car
ried away to Babylon, where he re
mained a prisoner until the day of
his death (Jer. 52:11).
Duty to Your Neighbor
Your “duty” to your neighbor will
have to be looked at In the light of
a pleasure If It is to do either you or
him much good.
Learning From Other*
You can learn a hundred things
from others where you learn one from
your own experience.
Culture
Culture is to know the best that ha*
been said and thought In the world.
I FARQUHAR SLAB BURNER I*
~ . There is no better time than the pres-
J L ent to cash in on this outfit. You can
* rW/* make money selling lumber. The
P, Farquhar Slab Burner is the only engine
raßjHpp on a rainy
Njffilinf, JifcJgliy day in the *
Farquhar Blab Buraar winter time. Farquhar Doubla Balt Saw BUI
WOODRUFF MACHINERY MFG. CO. ,
41 South Forsyth Street Atlanta, Ga.
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i: What Is Going On i?
:: subscribe to -
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.. news, extra good sporting page, all the latest Stock Market re- «►
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:: CASH IN—ADVANCE MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES |
«• 4 ►
Time Daily and Sundays Daily One Sunday Only
• » 1 month .75 .65 .30
3 months 2.25 1.95 .90
•• 6 months 4.50 3.90 1.80
12 months 9.00 7.80 3.50 4
•J. J
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| NEW LYONS PHARMACY §
«. j
? LOCAL AGENT f
h- * i
*
Z
fi h 1111:: 11:1111111 ****** - : - :: . : . :: .. t: 11 11 u ,, 11 *
1 ' ' MU. »
Every man, no matter what his position in life, has a certain nun,- .
T her of bills to pay. Business men, those who have become more
2 than an everage success, always pay their bills by check. You
can enjoy this same privilege by starting a Checking Account with l J*
2 this Bank. Your canceled Check is an excellent receipt of pay- \*
f ment for any bill. X .
| TOOMBS COUNTY BANK \
I CAPITAL AND SURPLUS - - - $37,000.00 4
f LYONS, GEORGIA &
| OFFICERS: f
| W. A. McNATT, President. R. L. PAGE, Vice-Pres. |
| W. T. CHINA, Cashier. |
I I
+4«fr* V -fr 4 * 4 * * ♦ 4* <«♦<»* » ****** ********* ** 4**4444 *4 4******+
(Georgia & Florida Railway *|
PASSENGER SCHEDULE |
Effective November 11th, 1923. A
THROUGH DAILY PULLMAN SERVICE BETWEEN AUGUSTA f
* AND JACKSONVILLE ON THE BON-AIR SPECIAL |
* DIRECT CONNECTIONS MADE AT JACKSONVILLE WITH f
| THE SEABOARD AIR LINE, ATLANTIC COAST LINE AND j*
* FLORIDA EAST COAST FOR ALL FLORIDA POINTS.
& DIRECT CONNECTIONS MADE AT AUGUSTA FOR RICH- |
X MOND, WASHINGTON AND NEW YORK. I
t 8:20a 8:00p Lv Augusta Ar 8:40a 6:10p
X 10:01a 9:25p St. Clair Lv 7:10a 4:26p 4£
v 10:50a 10:07p Midville 6:29a 3:34p 4
% 11:27a 10:40p Swainsboro 5:55a 2:52p *
X 11:42a 10:53p Wesley 5:42a 2:37p £
X 12:40p 11:36p Vidalia 5:00a 1:55p f
T 1:42p 12:30a ...a Hazlehurst 4:00a 12:37p 4*
? 2:45p 1:30a Douglas 3:05a 11:30a
X 3:25p 2:07a Willacoochee 2:27a 10:47a Ijl
X 4:02p 2:46a Nashville 1:51a 10:10a* X
X 4:55p 3:40a Ar Valdosta 1:00a 9:05a f
18 :50p 8:00a Jacksonville Lv 9:05p 4
VIDALIA AND MILLEN BRANCH |
6:55a Lv Vidalia Ar 12:35p X
7:48a Lv Stillmore Lv 11:42a 2
9:10a Rr Millen Lv 10:20a J
J. E. KENWORTHY, Gen. Pa.,. Agent. I
Augusta, Georgia V
f f