Newspaper Page Text
Watch Your Kidneys!
Your health depends upon your kid
neys. When your kidneys are inactive,
blood and nerves are poisoned and many
mysterious ills result. You feel dull and
drowsy; get up often at night and suffer
annoying kidney irregularities. Your
back aches; you have headaches and
dizzy spells; your nerves are constantly
on edge and you are always tired.
If your kidneys are sluggish, help
them with Doan’s Dills. Doan’s act
on the kidneys only. Are recommended
the world over. Ask your neighbor!
A Georgia Case
. J. R. Lawhon,
213 15th St., Au-
1 gusta, 'Ga., says:
"I had pains in my
back and I found
It difficult to lift
anything or stoop
over. Mornings
e the muscles were
gstiff and sore. My
[kidneys were so
[active at night I
gdidn’t rest well
ana this made me feel tired. When
I bent ever I became dizzy. After
using Doan’s Pills I was relieved.”
DOAN’S
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chern.. Buffalo, N. Y.
PACIFYING
REBEL STOMACHS
Dr. King’s Royal Germeteur
Treats Stomach Trouble
Safely.
Dr. King’s Royal Germetuer is
peculiarly adapted to the relief of
stomach troubles. Indeed, it aets
almost immediately, stops fermen
tation at once, acts favorably upon
the glands which secrete the gas
tric juices, eliminates the causes
of inflammation and creates appe
tite by the normal healthy means
W assisting the stomach properly
to dispose of the food taken Into it.
If health waits on appetite,, appe
tite waits on Royal Germeteur.
i The seat of most nervous disor
ders lies in the improper function
ing of the stomach, man’s most
abused organ. Indigestion Is a
forerunner of more serious ail
ments. Constipation is a warning.
Dr. King's Royal Germeteur Is a
reliable and harmless home rem
edy, and results of taking it M
directed are soon evident. <
Dr. King’s Royal Germeteur Is
sold by most good druggists, or will
be sent prepaid upon receipt of
SI.OO by Ellis-Jonea Drug Company,
Memphis, Tenn.—-Adv.
FOR OVER
ZOO YEARS
haarlem oil has been a world
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
■correct internal troubles, stimulate vital
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
r on the original genuine Gold Medal.
Ships to Russia
Haberdashery and textiles made In
Poland are being’shipped to Russia.
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
M ihmgestk*/
/ ¢s jf
IC^wS^^SsBeLLANS
Hot water
Sure Relief
DELL-ANS
254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
av Boschee’s Syrup
/
-lr^ Coughs and
*1 /Wk Lung Troubles
\ /nxIL yluHW® Successful for 69 years.
30c and 90c bottles—
iNlHnlnlHilHH ALL DRUGGISTS
After A Bath
With
Cuticura Soap
Dust With
CuticuraTalcum
/ Delicately Medicated
T?s* Os Pleasing Fragranee
ROILS
■MP There’s quick, positive,
relief in
CARBOIL
GENEROUS 50 f BOX
At *ll Druggists-—'Money bKk Guaranty
If Y° u
fed so good
'vSL but what N?
Vl\ will make you
l y feel better* 1
Set a j
IMPORTANT NEWS
THE WORLD OVER
IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS
AND OTHER NATIONS FOR
SEVEN DAYS GIVEN
THE NEWS^THE SOUTH
What Is Takino Place In The South.
land Will Be Found In
Brief Paragraphs
Foreign—
The floods, caused by a 3G - hour
rain, which recently inundated the
Honjo district of Tokyo, Japan, have
subsided. It is estimated that thirty
thousand houses were submerged, the
residents spending the night on the
hillsides. The damage is estimated
;at several million yen. A number of
casualties are reported. The flood is
the worst in ten years.
Ninety lives depend upon the deci
sion of King Boris of Bulgaria. Bul
; garia’s ruler has that many court-
I martial death sentences before him for
I approval. In general, however, the
' king is opposed to capital punishment
and so far he has approved only five
sentences of death. At a recent cab
inet meeting ho said he probably
would not approve any more.
Another drama of the world war
ended at Veilby Reach on the West
Jutland coast, the other day. The
German submarine U-20, credited with
the destruction of the Lusitania, torpe
doed and sunk off the Irish coast, on
May 7, 1915, with a loss of 1,206 par
sons, was blown up by order of the
Danish admiral.
A tenttative agreement for settling
the French debt to Great Britain in
62 annual payments of 12,500,000
pounds sterling ($67,500,000 approxi
mately) each, has been reached by Mr.
Winston Churchill, British chancellor
of the exchequer, end M. Caillaux, fi
nance minister.
At the theaters owned and operat
ed by their families until the revo
lution robbed royalty of such pos
sessions, Prince Heinrich, the 24th,
and Joachim Ernst, who, but for the
revolution, would have been duke of
Anhalt, are making good as assistant
producers on the stage.
The preliminary security pact con
versations, with Germany participat
ing, begins in London. The German
government has accepted the allied
invitation to send a legal adviser to
the conference. Director Dauss of the
foreign office will be the German del
egate.
The Manchurian bandits who are
holding Dr. Harvey J. Howard, an
American eye specialist, for ransom
were surrounded by Chinese soldiers
recently, but got away and have tak
en their prisoner 250 miles from Fu
chin, in the Manchurian province of
Holungkiang.
Two Alpine guides were killed and
eight members of the Alpine society of
the Julian Alps were entrapped in
“the grotto” near Pinguente recently.
The accident was due to a sudden rush
of water. The guides fell to the bot
tom of the cavern and were instantly
killed.
Washington—
The first kick against prohibition
enforcement methods under Lincoln
C. Andrews, dry chief, came in the
form of a suit filed in the District
supreme court by George Rock, pro
prietor of a near beer saloon, asking
that Andrews and local officials be
enjoined from interfering with his
business. Through his attorney, Rock
charges that the police and prohibi-.
tion agents are employing high-hand
| ed and strong-arm methods' in an ef
fort to destroy his business.
The government has taken another
step in removing its public lands in
Florida from possible acquisition by
real estate operators through home
stead laws. An executive order has
been issued by the inteeior depart-
I ment, withdrawing forty-four lots in
St. Mark’s township in Wakulla coun
ty, near Tallahassee, from the pub
lic domain, which means that title
ito this land cannot be secured by
homesteading.
The labor department’s new immi
i gration inspection system, attacked re
cently in a public statement by Im
; migration Commissioner Curran of
: New York, has been declared by
; Secretary Davis to have been success
ful in the British and Irish Free State
ports, where it recently was installed,
even to a greater degree than he had
anticipated.
Developments in the foreign debt
situtaion abroad were regarded by ob
- servers in Washington as likely to
have the effect of seriously complicat
ing the forthcoming negotiations for
funding the debts of France and Italy
to the United States.
The treasury, in laying its tax re
duction program before congress, will
omit any recommendations that the
average man's taxes be cut any fur
ther. It does not believe they should
be lowered beyond their present level.
Senator Oscar W. Underwood of
Alabama, who announced recently that
he will not be a candidate for re-elec
tion, is in Washington making prep
arations for moving his household to
“Woodlawn," a country place near
Mt. Vernon, where he plans to make
his home after leaving the senate in
March, 1927.
THE BULLETIN. IRWINTON. GEORGI*
Indications are that the army’s bud
get for 1927 will be limited to a fig
ure which will require new reductions
in its enlisted and command person
nel. Although no authoritative esti
mate has been made available, there
is a general fear among war depart
ment officials that from seven thou
sand to ten thousand enlisted men
will have to be dropped, in addition,
possibly, to one thousand or two
thousand officers.
Thomas P. Cooper, dean of the col
lege of agriculture of the University
of Kentucky, will be required to stand
a civil service examination before he
can be permanently installed as chief
of the bureau of agricultural econom
ics, to which he has recently been
appointed.
Secretary of the Navy recently ad
ministered a sharp and severe repri
mand to Lieut. Andrew L. W. Gor
don for his conduct as judge advocate
of the court-martial which acquitted
two navy nurses on charges of bring
ing liquor into this country from Cuba.
Former Secretary of State Charles
Evans Hughes is on a visit in Wash
ington, and was cordially and enthu
siastically received by his old col
leagues on his arrival from New York.
Racing with icy barriers that threat
en to lock the northland earlier than,
usual, the MacMillan Arctic expedi
tion again is fighting its way south
through blinding snow and heavy fog.
Domestic —
The Southern Baseball Association
investigation, which threatened to
flare up into a baseball scandal, turn
ed out to be a dud. After an exhaus
tive investigation, it is found that the
charges published in the Nashville
Banner that there was a frame-up
between the Nashville and New Or
leans club that players would be sent
to New Orleans from Nashville so
that the Pelicans might win the pen
nant, are absolutely unjustified and
groundless.
A test of river navigation possibil
ities from Kansas City to the Gulf will
be undertaken next month, when four
barges will leave Kansas City, Mo.,
laden with steel for a 14-mile sea
wall at Gulfport, Miss. The steel will
be shipped by the Woods Brothers
corporation, builders of the sea wall.
An accurate chart of the costs of the
voyage down the Missouri and Mis
sissippi rivers will be kept.
Walter L. Cohen, negro comptroll
er of the customs for the New Orleans
district; Dr. L. A. Meraux, sheriff
of St. Bernard parish; Capt. Jo
seph Johnson of the New Orleans po
lice department, now under suspen
sion, and 30 others were indicted by
the federal grand jury in New Or
leans charged with conspiracy to vi
olate the national proMbition act.
Ku Klux Klan officials clamp
ed a tight censorship on information
concerning the national meeting of
grand dragons and titans being held
at Buckeye Lake, Ohio. Sessions have
been executive, but this action fol
lowed the publication of several sto
ries obtained by newspaper men from
persons attending the meetings.
The Chicago Daily News, chief as
set of the vast estate disposed of in
Victor F. Lawson’s will, hereafter will
assume a position unique in journal
ism. The newspaper, along with many
other items of the publisher’s estate,
was placed under the administration
of the Illinois Merchants’ Trust com
pany.
Summary court-martial has been di
rected tor the two marines charged
with having gone to sleep while on
guard duty at the summer white
house. The trial probably will take
place within a few days aboard the
presidential yacht Hayflower at Mar
blehead, where the two are under ar
rest.
It is announced from Wilkesbarre,
Pa., where a “no-strike committee” of
miners and a citizens’ committee are
holding a meeting that the operators
have receded from the step they had
previously promulgated, and that a
settlement of the anthracite difficulty
without a strike is in sight.
Woodbury Hansom, 52, director in
a score of Kalamazoo’s leading indus
trial and banking concerns, an ex
tensive holder of timber projects in
Oregon anti Arkansas, and reputed to
be one of Michigan’s wealthiest men,
succumbed to a two year illness the
other day at Kalamazoo.
A double funeral was held from Su
gar Hill church at Buford, Ga., for
Cicero Mooney, 69, and his son, Clar
ence, 27, who met their death when
they were overcome by gas in a well
at the home of A. F. Gregory.
When Mrs. Eliza Etopinal, widow
of the late Gen. Alfred Estopinal, for
ten years a member of congress from
Louisiana, is buried in St. Louis cem
erty in New Orleans, the pallbearers
will be her nine sons.
Ethel Barrymore returned to New
York from London the other day with
a shingle bob because she “felt too
conspicuous in London theaters with
it long.”
Rt. Rev. Theodore D. Bratton, bish
op of the Eniscopal diocese of Missis
sippi, who is ill at a hospital in New
Orleans, and who was operated upon
recently, is Improving and has a good
chance for recovery, his physicians an
' nounce.
Another effort to unite the Method
ist Episcopal church, South, with the
Northern branch will be made at the
• church. Rev. W. P. Baird of Coving
’ ton, Ky„ said that several clergymen
i and laymen will attempt to push meas
i urea under which a reconciliation may
be effected.
STATE ITEMS
CONDENSED
Summerville.—Plans are being made
by local singers and music lovers tor
the semi-annual meeting of the Chat
tooga county singing convention,
which will be held at the county court
house here on the first Sunday in Sep
tember. The officers of the conven
tion anticipate the best singing con
vention ever held in the county, and
many prominent singers from adjoin
ing counties and from Tennessee and
Alabama are expected to be in attend
ance.
Americus. —One of the most import
ant real estate transactions in recent
years, in so far as the consideration
is concerned, was consummated here
recently when the Standard Oil com
pany purchased from Easterlin Bro
thers a lot at the intersection of twq
of the most prominent business streets
in Americus for a cash consideration
of thirteen thousand dollars. A fill
ing station, which will be leased to
an individual, will be erected within
the next two months.
Gainesville. —Funeral services for
Hulett M. Davenport, 23, who died
at the navy hospital in New York as
a result of injuries received in a foot
ball game in 1922, were held here on
August 22. Interment was in Alta
Vista cemetery. He entered the navy;
six years ago in the department of
pharmacy, in which he was promoted
to the position of chief, the highest
rank. He took an active part in base
ball, basketball and football. The in
jury which killed him was caused from
a kick while playing football.
Calhoun.—An addition Is being built
>to the Echota cotton mills plant here.
Work was begun on the addition sev
eral days ago, and It is planned to
complete it this fall. The new part
will consist of a building 75x80 feet,
one story and basement, and it is an
nounced by mill officials that it will
cost approximately ten thousand dol
lars. This mill has been going at top
speed for several months, and the ex
tra space was needed to relieve the
crowded condition in the mill. H. F.
Jones is superintendent of this mill.
Columbus.—Wayne Patterson, re
tail sales manager of the Columbus
'Electric and Power company, will
immediately be sent to Albany in a
supervisory capacity as a result of
the purchase by the local company
of the Georgia-Alabama Power com
pany and the South Georgia Public
Service company. Announcement to
this effect was made in a telegram
from R. M. Harding, manager of the
Columbus Electric and Power compa
ny, who is in Savannah. The wire
was in reply to an inquiry. Mr. Har
ding, whose office is in Columbus, will
be in general charge of both compa
nies.
Way cross.—-Demand for Ware coun
ty farm land is increasing daily, ac
cording to a statement made recent
ly by Dr. H. J. Heyde, county agent
Os Ware county. Four large sales are
reported for the recent past. Doctor
Heyde states that he is in receipt
of letters from parties in all sections
of the South and a few inquiries from
farmers of the North and West, ask
ing about the prospects of securing
farms near Waycross. One letter has
been received from a large sugar cane
planter of Louisiana, stating that if
desirable land can be secured, a num
ber of cane growers of that state will
move immediately to this section.
Atlanta. —Increases in fares averag
ing about 20 per cent were granted
the Atlanta and Northern railroad on
its interurban line running between
Atlanta and Marietta in an order just
handed down by the Georgia public
service commission. The increased
fares are to be effective on and af
ter September 1. The Atlanta and
Northern is a subsidiary of the Geor
gia Railway and Power company, and
is operated by the latter. The in
creases granted are the result of a
compromise reached last spring be
tween the company and the chamber
of commerce of Marietta The com
-1 pany at that time presented a sched
■ ule of rates higher than those grant
ed, but after conferences with the
Marietta chamber of commerce and
leading citizens, the scale adopted was
• agreed on as a compromise.
Savannah. — Federal prohibition
men sworn in as deputy United States
marshals in the big round-up of liquor
violators in Savannah and vicinity and
who arrested a large number of al
leged bootleggers, devoted attention
to the apprehension of “stragglers,"
1 who were named in bench warrants
signed by Judge William H. Barrett.
Arrests have been resumed and there
are still a handfull left against whom
' warrants have been issued. Six de
i fendants were the latest additions to
the list.
Americus. —Sumter county will hold
its county fair the first week in Oc
tober, according to County Agent Cli
ett, who recently named several com
mittees to canvass the merchants for
advertisements for the fair catalogue.
Cliett is of the opinion that the coun
: ty faif will attract a number of out
s of-the-state farmers who are desir
ous of making a change, and that it
i is the best method of displaying the
products grown in the county. Last
' year the chamber of commerce spon
sored the fair, and made money.
Standby
/lew Dress
«—the same dependable remedy
that over a period of more than
fifty years has been found so
reliable in the treatment of
catarrh and diseases of catarrhal
nature.
The outside of the package
only has been altered. To facil
itate packing and reduce break
age in shipping, the paper wrap
per which has identified the
Pe-ru-na bottle for many years
has been displaced by a substan
tial pasteboard carton.
Pe-ru-na cannot be made any
better. Three generations of
users testify that Pe-ru-na is the
best remedy in the world for
catarrh and diseases of catarrhal
_ origin.
~ —=S=| The remedy our fathers and
grandfathers used with so much
==========: satisfaction is still the standby
* ——r — q for the ills of everyday in
thousands of American homes.
PE-RU-NA
- The Original and Reliable Remedy
(or Catarrh
The New Package ®°“ Everywhere
new rocsage Tablete or Liquid
Send 4 Cents Cor booklet on catarrh to the
Pe-ra-na Company, Columbus, Ohio
Candy Slab Tombstone
M. Francisco was born in Italy and
came to this country In 1860. He was
a candy-maker and made his home in
Danville, Va. He died there recently.
Ip his will he stipulated that the three
marble slabs on which he cooled his
products be used for his tombstone.
So now the candy slabs contain his
epitaph instead of his taffy.
Freshen a Heavy Skin
With the antiseptic, fascinating Cuti
cura Talcum Powder, an exquisitely
scented, economical face, skin, baby
and dusting powder and perfume.
Renders other perfumes superfluous.
One of the Cutlcura Toilet Trio (Soap^
Ointment, Talcum) .—Advertisement.
Women Letter-Carriers
Women as letter-carriers in Great
Britain have proved a success, accord
ing to Sir William Mitchell-Thomson,
postmaster general, who said recently
that 4,200 women were in the employ
of the department in that capacity.
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
should be in every home. Unexcelled for
Cuts, Burns, Wounds and Sores. Heals
quickly. Three sizes; all stores. —Adv.
Polly’s One Weakness
Lady—Does that parrot swear?
Sailor—A little, but he never drinks
or gambles.
Quick 9 i
Safe I
Relief
CORNS
In one minute—or less—the pain ends. Dr.
Scholl’s Zino-pad is the safe, sure, healing
treatment for corns At drug and shoe stores
D£ Scholls
Zino-pads
put one on ■ the pain is gone
Don’t
sc ra tch
that rash -
L J it's dangerous!
Stop the itching
5 and clear away
the trouble by using
Resinol
WJ
81/Z^^Mb ® wn Your Own Garage |
j /^UdTia When you come home in the car H
—)_■ late on a cold winter night you M
appreciate the convenience of ■
your own garage. Your car is H
safer in a private garage, provid-
ing Jt 18 fireproof. ■
f ■ Comfort and safety can both be
B yours by building one with con-
X ^BSHmßw< M crete. And it will not be erpen
-7^o^ J Bive > for Port,and Cement is the
(JKHBBBk cheapest manufactured com- ■
Bhw|M| modify. ■
Your building material dealer
^QMHN can furnish* you with good nr.
ideas for garages built of con- K/ \
v fKW crete made with Atlas Portland MhA
QB Cement.
1 atlas J«
‘“ipomuHD ctsanl™
Standard tyluliich all othermakes awmeasund?
Tact
Housewife —Is that you, John?
Burglar—Yes, darling.—Sydney Bul
letin.
He Owes His 40 Years
of Constant Good Health
to Beecham’s Pills
"I am 57 years old and com
menced to be troubled with con
stipation when I was sixteen.
"In 1884 I started taking Beech
am's Pills other remedies having
failed. I have not had a sick day
in ail the 40 years."
F. LOUIS LOEFFLER
Rochester, N. Y.
For FREE SAMPLE—write
B. F. AUen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York
Buy from your druggist in 35 and SOC boxes
For constipation, biliousness, sick head
aches and other digestive ailments take
Beecham’s Pills
GOULDS I
PUMPS
AND WATER |
SYSTEMS
Write for booklet A
giving details of our
complete line of elec
tric and engine driven I |
pumpsand water sys-
terns for every need.
The Goulds Manufacturing Co.
Seneca Falls, N. Y.
Brother Farmer
Wayne County, with its wonderful cli
mate, cheap lands, splendid churches
and schools, invites you to locate here.
A great boom is headed our way. Act
at once. Write ,
BOARD OF TRADE, JESUP, GA. 1
m.GHtM SEED OATS, 85c; RYE. J 1.75.
Crimson clover seed, the best cover crop, $4.95
bushel. Fulghum Seed Co., Atlanta, Georgia.
IS A MOVIE CAREER YOUR AMBITION?
Write to one having had 17 years’ experi
ence (1908-1925). JNO. M. BURNS, Box
110, Times Square Station, New York City.
Florida— Reliable Information about soils, climate,
agriculture, advantages, opportunities. Arranged by
counties. Booklet 30«. Guy Vinson, Tribune Bld j.,Tam pa, Fl*.
WOMEN —SEND YOUR NAME AND AD
dress for interesting reading about our book,
“How to He Beautiful." SUPER SALES
SERVICE. Box 180, ST. PAUL, MINN.
Wanted—Uadies, Boys and Girls to demon
strate Furni-shine, the new furniture cleaner
and polish. Big seller. Liberal commissions.
Reeder Prod. Co., 234 E. 2nd Av., Columbus, O.
hew Crop Good Fulghum Seed Oats, Rye,
wheat and crimson clover seeds. Write for
price list. Fulghum Seed Co., Rome, Georgia.
W. N. U M ATLANTA, NO. 36-1925.