Newspaper Page Text
Brought Up on a Farm
As a young man Dr, Pierce prac
ticed medicine in a rural ql§trlct and
tract of native roots. This “Discov
ery” of Dr. Plerce’'s clears away
pimples and annoying eruptions,
tends to keep the complexion fresh
and clear. It corrects the disordered
‘gonditions in a sick stomach, aids di
gestion, acts as a tonic and enriches
the blood. Vim is sure to follow its
use. All dealers. Tablets or liquid.
Social Position Assured
“;[ hope this expulsion of ours isn’t
going to injure me socially,” remarked
Eve ruefully. .
“Oh, I think not,” returned Adam
calmly. “Nothing of the sort can pre
vent us from heading the list of first
families, you know.”
.'. . .
Child's Harmless Laxative is
& . : ”
California Fig Syrup
8D S
DY
B RS
(Ne
/c ‘\ \—
Even if cross, feverish, billous, con
stipated or full of cold, children love
the pleasant taste of “California Fig
Syrup.” A teaspoonful never fails to
gently clean the liver and bowels and
Yweeten the stomach.
Ask your druggist for genuine “Cali
fornia Fig Syrup” which has directions
for babies and children of all ages
printed on bottle. Mother! You must
say “California” or you may get an
imitation fig syrup.
haarlem oil has been a world
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
HAARLEM OIL
correctinternal troubles, stimulate vital
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
on the original genuine GoLp MEDAL.
°k A :
Quic
Safe [
* J ;
Relief Ei¥c
In one minute—or less—the pain ends. Dr.
Scholl’s Zino-pad is the safe, sure, healing
treatment for corns Atdrugand al'we stores.
Dz Scholl’s
o
Zino-pads
Put one on-the pain is gone
A e e il
The Fashions
Gov. Nellie Ross of Wyoming said
at a luncheon in Cheyenne:
“A little boy was asked the other
day what kind of new dresses his
mother had brought back from Paris,
“‘Long short drerses,” he said.
“‘Long short dresses? Nonsense,
child! Dresses can be long and short
at the same time’
““Well, these are,’ said he. ‘They’re
long in the waist and short at the
top and bottom.”
Get Back Your Health!
§ ‘Are you dragging around day after
day with a dull backache? Are you
tired .and lame mornings—subject to
headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stab
-1 bing pains? Then there’s surely some
thing wrong. Probably it’s kidney
weakness! Don’t wait for more serious §.
kidney trouble. Get back your health
and keep it. For quick relief get Doan’s
Pills, a stimulant diuretic to the kid
| neys. They have helped thousands and
# should help you. Ask your neighbor!
A Georgia Case
e
. ran' . 5 3
' %;1:11?1136 Ga., Bays: ) Tme A
% neys acte SN
lrrggularlyy and I ’é‘l‘l\f s T
had backache. Fi- SEQRIRHITNS
nally I was laid ufi L R \;,1; 3
in bed and my bac 8 Y
was so stiff I could 3 R
hardly turn over k\ : XSV N
or lie comfortably. 4*&",“ e O
Knifg-lll}:e pains in @ /’”Wt )
w - U 2 V 8 3
":'ne{'e :.gd m(e)xx"gi:ga Ul I':\‘ i £i%s"
I felt stiff and achy in every joint.
Doan’s Pills cured me entirely.”
DOAN’S "4l
60c
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster-Milburn Co., Mig. M.Bnflo.fl.\'.
|STATE ITEMS
; CONDENSED
Macon.—Breaking a precedent of 93
years of Mercer's history, Wwholesale
hazing of freshmen was begun on the
campus of Mercer university . hex%,
while sophomore in a meeting declared
they would clip the hair of every fresh
man before they quit. Scores 6f heads
were trimmed by the second year men
and the nights are marked by “wild
man hunts” through the alleys of the
downtown section.
Athens.—J. E. Oldham, 62, Putnam
county farmer, who was shot by his
son+in-law, John Oldham, died at a
local hospital here, and was buried |
at Buckhead, in Morgan county. His
son-in-law will be arrested, it is stat
ed. John Oldham, who married J. E.
Oldham’s daughter, is also a 'nephew
of the latter. They all live together,
it is stated. It is said that Oldham,
senior, whipped the younger man’s
wife, and for that reason young Old
bam shot the elder man.
LaGrange.—Fire which at one time
threatened the entire city, was extin
guished after destroying seven resi
dences at the Dixie mill here. All
| available fire fighting forces in the city
\us well as those at the various mills
were pressed into service. They were
‘handicapped in their battle due to a
|shortage of water. Fortunately the
tank of the mill supplied sufficient wa
ter to extinguish the blaze. The dam
age is estimated at ten thousand dol
lars.
Atlanta.—lnitial steps toward meet
ing provisions of the new state law re
quiring the placing of “stop” signs at
| dangerous railroad = grade crossings
Iwere taken-at a conference between |
|legal representatives and engineering !
!officials of all railroads in Georgia at
|the Terminal station assembly room of
ithe Southern railway. The meeting
was attended. also by W. R. Neel,
state highway engineer, and George
Deibert, secretary of the Atlanta Safe
| ty council. 4
Atlanta.—lnformation that the Au
gusta - Aiken Railway -and Electric
|company has resumed a 15 - minute
*trolley schedule in Augusta in place
lof the hour schedule caused several
tweeks ago by drouth has been receiv
| ‘ed by the Georgia public gervice com
imission. Receipt of a telegram by
Ithe commigsion is said to indicate a
| break in the drouth conditions as as
! fecting Augusta, as it means that the
'company has found enough power to
‘foperate at the regular 15 - minute
schedule again.
I Moultrie—C. L. Crane and W. M.
Robinson, alleged liquor runners, ar- |.
rested when two high-speed automo
biles and 600 quarts of whisky were
| seized on the Moultrie-Berlin road,
|posted cash bonds in the sum of two
|thousand dollars and were released.
| Another man and woman—who were
| with Crane and Robinson—were taken
‘lnto custody also, but were later re
t‘leased, officers holding they had no
ldir(-rct evidence connecting them with
|the case. The latter two refused to
idivulge their names. -
l Gray.—Judge J. C. Barron of Gray
city court bound over Atkinson Eth
eridge and Grover Etheridge to the
Jones county superior court on the
charge of murder, in connection with
the slaying on August 28 of Floyd
Malone, county policeman, and Frank
Tucker, his deputy. The state -in
troduced a number of witnesses, the
most important of whom was Austin
Pitts, a negro. The defense did not
'pr'esent any testimony. The case now
| awaits action by the Jones county
!grand jury.
! Atlanta—Muscogee county has ap- |
iplied to John N. Holder, chairman of
the state highway commission, for
road construction work in that county
on sixty-six miles of state highway
at a cost approximating two million
dollars. The request of the county
for the highway work was presented
Iby Rhodes Brown, Gunby Jordan and
| C. M. Woolfolk, who stated that Mus
cogee stands ready to pay $3 to the
state and federal governments’ $1 for
the project. The usual proportion is
{sl by the county to the state and fed
eral government’'s $3. The proposal
| will be referred to the highway board
‘at the meeting on October 2 by Chair
man ‘Holder, and will be considered
|at that timé. Other requests for high
}way work were received by Chairman
Holder in an all-day series of confer
fences recently. He received over two I
ihundred visitors who composed about !
| fitteen delegations from various coun- l
| ties wanting work done. A delega
tion from Henry county asked that |
seven miles of route number 42 be‘
paved so that drouth-stricken farmers l
.| may be given employment. Elbert,
Hart, Forsyth, Jasper and Newton
counties asked additional state high
way mileage, while Franklin, Gwinnett,
| Milton, Ocomee, Jasper, Newton and
Clayton counties asked for additional
road construction work.
© West Point.—Untited States Senator
{ Thomas J. Heflin of Alabama was the
‘principal speaker at the first session
of the Georgia Press association’s an- I
nual convention which opened here |
September 21. He delivered his fam- |
ous lecture om the “Story of the|
South,” in which he recounted the glo- l
rione part played in this section in
| world affairs. Following the address
| of Sentor Heflin, Senator W. J. Har
| ris made a short talk, in which he
spoke of the important work the press
of Georgia is doing for the hoosting
and upbuilding of the state.
was known far
and wide for
his great success
in alleviating
disease. He
early moved to
Buffalo and put
up in ready-to
use form, his
Golden Medical
Discovery, the
well-known ton
ic for the blood,
which is an ex-
THE BULLETIN. IRWINTON. GEORGIA
’
SICK WOMEN
OF MIDDLE AGE
Can Be Carried Comfortably Over
The Critical Period by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
—Note Mrs. Headden’s Case ’
of sl onbioei wis g the Changs |
=1 side and could not lie
‘lon my left side. I
] was in bed about two
rn%ntl'xsa.nlfl couldnot
~{ get up only as my
‘| son would lift me.
| Afterdoctoringwith
] out relief a man who
] was rooming with us
i} toldmysonthatLydia
«] E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compoundcured
his mother at the
Change of Life, so
I began taking your medicine. After
taking it for two weeks I could get out
of my bed by myself. I am now 53
years old and in better heaith and
stronger than ever in my life. I have
recommended the Vegetable Compound
to mang suffering women, young and
old, an You may use my name any
where as long as you I;;»tl’gae.e. I will ge
glad to answer any letters sent to me.”’
—Mrs. F. B. HEADDEN, 5 Holt Avenue,
Macon Georgia.
In a recent country-wide canvass of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, over 200,000 replies were received
and 98 out of every 100 reported they
had been benefited bg its use. For sule
by druggists everywhere.
{ : |\ o
PN
/ 2
A \/i 0 r : i
w Baild
Up Your Strength
With Wintersmith’s
Lor 56 years the standard rem
edy for Chills, Fever and Ague,
Dengue and ogfier fevers has been
‘Wintersmith’s Chill Tonic. Taken
at the first sign of these troubles,
" it wards them off. Fine to take
after almost any illness; its tonic
effectis always good. Atyour dn:g
store; popular size, 60c; mammo:
size big value, SI.OO,
Wintersmith Chemical Co., Inc.
- Louisville, Kentucky
intersmith’s
b Chill Tonic ‘
Polish Canals
Poland’s proposed canal system will
provide a westward water route for
agricultural yields and one eastward
for industrial products.
A Household Remedy
for Cuts, Burns, Wounds, Any Sore. Han
ford’s Balsam of Myrrh prevent infection
and heals. Three sizes; all stores.—Adv.
Some young wives love old hushands
because of their ability to transform
them inte rich widows.
e e———
_ (- NCR '
RE Y X
Az o NIV
j our
i oo WO RN
sports or &9 T o w
recreations? y e R 0
® P
Try HOSTETTER'S 2 ol S
e Stomacs Bt s FERT NG
At All Dragsists © (G GREH
The Hostetter Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. W
HOSTETTER’S
B CELEBRATED
STOMACH BITTERS
PR R S 3 T S
e RS |
(4 ~
Have @4§§
. * g DY
(omplexion &=+~ |
You can make and keep &our complexe ’
jon as lovely as a young girl’s by givinga |
little attention to your blood. Remember, ‘
a good complexion isn't skin deep —it's §
health deep.
Physicians agree that sulphur isone of i
the most effective blood purifiers known
to science. Hancock Sulphur Compound
is an old, reliable, scientific remedy. that J
purges the blood of impurities. Taken
internally —a few drops in a glass of § 1
water, it gets at the root of the trouble, |
As a lotion, it soothes and heals, ¥
60c and $1.20 the bottle at your drug- l :
gist's. If he can't supply you, send his :
name and the price in stamps and we
will send you a bottle direct.
HANcock LiQuip SULPHUR COMPANY
Baltimore, Maryland
Hanoook Sulphur Compound Qintment— 0¢
and 60o— for use with P
Hancock 1
Sulphur Compound |
]
‘AN AILING. STOMACH ! ;
A5 THE SEAT OF MOST |
LUL R T N T
A 300 < (o
Y T 3 : E
SN R
avinaL | \ v [ ]
SRR SONLDN L B INPC IN TR
-y . E
; AT YOUR :DRUGGIST'S S
i SI.OO IHl" BOTTLE l
ut ‘ | .
3
- \ \
éln P
J ;,'Q\s:l
umoy;y
i ) ;/ '
o NS 2
S = AN ,
MERE INTRODUCTION !
e B !
Old Man (fiercely)—You’ve stepped!
right on my corn. |
_ Man (joyfully)—Then you have a |
corn, sir? I thought so from the ap- |
pearance of your boot, but wasn't|
quite certain, so I subjected your foot i
to a slight pressure, for which I hum- |
bly beg your pardon, and feel surel
you will grant it when I tell you that |
you can save yourself from all future ‘
suffering by purchasing a box of my }
wonderful corn-plasters! ;
|
| GEORGE WAS WISE ,
T .
|
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| : |
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i - |
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‘,\
2\ =\ |
B T ' ¥, |
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= 0 —feßAe a
Sl vZ | v
= ‘ 28 | |
e ¥ é
¥ |
// A s
( irs J o
o= N & |
ot i
“George isn’t engaged, is he?” |
“I don’t think so. He said he was |
nobody’s fool.” !
{
Safety First |
Doctor (bandaging the arm of a beg- |
gar who has been run over)—lt's a |
wonder you don’t use soap and water |
now and then. !
Beggar—l have thought of it, sir, but |
there’s so many kinds of soap about |
now, and it's so hard to tell which is |
and which is not injurious to the skin, |
that I don’t like to take any risks! i
|
Knew All About Them ’
Old Sailor—Yes, mum, that's a|
man-o’-war. ‘
Lady—How interesting! And what |
is that little one just in front? I
“Oh, that's just a tug.” ;
“Oh, yes, of course, tug-of-war, I've |
heard of them.”—Bucknell Belle Hup.:l
FEr T o t
TAKING A LONG CHANCE |
z
|
e |
=i [ ~| |
<z Sy ) !
== o 7 |
Z 939 T@id| |
/ )\ —> e |
'(J)J o) 2 T 3
V) _~ S §
(o g L 0
/] = i
I / LB ;
B |
: !
d;‘z)’ |
Wifie—You're taking a big chances
of being held up by not coming home |
until after midnight. !
Hubby—l suppose I am—a sort oti
twelve to one chance, so to speak. !
—e ——————— i
! Why Court in Dark |
That love is blind who can deny? i
| And so permit me to remark i
~ That doubtless is the reason why {
| We do our courting in the dark. !
Probably |
He sauntered inte a railroad officeg
with much self-assurance and an air of |
familiarity, threw down his business |
. < |
card and inquired: ;
“Who’s the main squeeze around |
here?” ‘
“Well,” said the good-looking stenog, |
“they’d all take me for it if I'd let |
‘em.” i
|
Out of Bounds ‘
“Hello, there,” hailed the motorist. |
“I'm lost.” |
“Haw, haw, thass a good one,” guf- |
sawed the native. “To think one of
vou city fellers would get lost here |
in Cross Timbers."—American Legion |
Weekly. !
He Knew Better |
The son of a lawyer at Morbihan |
came to Paris for his studies. Asked |
how he liked it, he said: |
“The streets are so dangerous at |
night !” i
“Why don't you carry a revolver?”’ |
“What! And have it stolen?"— |
Sans Gene, Paris. '
Diplomacy i
“So Pruddler has given up smok- j(
ing?” “
“Yes. On the advice of his doctor, |
at the request of his wife, and by
command of his mother-in-law !"—Ber« |
lin Schmutzige Wasche., |
A T i
Caught ! |
“I have been arrested for driving toc |
slowly !” ¢ i
“Too fast, you mean!”
“No, too slowly. I stole the car but l
couldn't get away with it." ‘
A
\‘\' ' ‘\
: : R
A n p
\ 3
ANBNS—E A&
:l ; ’ N X / ?
3 Keep the Mud Out
an Little feet—and big ones, too—
AN r have a habit of forgetting the
E . doormat.
4 e L1 The housewife appreciates the
6 ) trimness and handiness of con
s f crete sidewalks and also clothes
poles connected by concrete
S paths. These and stationary
|~y tubs of concrete are a big help
M on washday.
= 9 The little jobs that mean so
g X much in convenience are small
NS in cost, for through the develop
/ ment of the rotary kiln, Atlas
Portland Cement is actually
cheaper today than it was thirty 1
; years ago. ;
L&-- - : - .
1 | ATLAS |.
"f\ “‘The Standard by which all other makes are measured”
Can You Speil Avoid?
Teacher—Can you spell “avoid,"!
Jakey? !
Jakey—Sure, teacher. Vot is der|
void?—New York Central Magazine,
“DIAMOND DYES”
COLOR THINGS NEW
Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye
Each 15-cent pack- !
age contains direc
tions so simple any
woman can tint
soft, delicate shades
or dye rich, nerma
nent colors in lin
gerie, silks, rib
bons, skirts, waists,
dresses, coats,
stockings, sweat-
ers, draperies, coverings, hangings—’
everything! !
Buy Diamond Dyres—no other kind—
and tell your druggist whether the ma
terial you wishk to color is wool or silk,
or whether it is linen, cotton or mixed
goods, f
Proof ‘
“She is twenty-eight years of age.”|
“Only twenty-eight. How do you!
know ?” c l
“She has always said so.” i
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN '
—_— |
Take Tablets Without Fear If You
See the Safety “Bayer Cross.” ’
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 25 years.
Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. i
Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adr. ;
Combined It With Sport [
“Did you take the cold plunge your|
doctor ordered?’ “Yes; I bought my-|
self a canoe.”—Boston Transcript. }
Don't Forget Cuticura Talcum
When adding to your toilet requisites.
An exquisite face, skin, baby and dust- |
ing powder and perfume, rendering
other perfumes superfluous. You may |
rely on it because cne of the Cuticura |
Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum), | .
25¢ each everywhere.—Advertisement. |-
There are few really good actors— |
persons who can express emotions that | .
everybody feels. .
Health and cheerfulness mutuaily |
beget each other.—Addiscun.
el
RHEUMATISM?
O H, what a wonderful feeling to be
free from that miserable rheuma
tism. To know again the joy of limber
joints and active muscles — freedom
from that agonizing pain!
How often have you longed for
some relief as you suffered torture
from swollen, inflamed muscles and
Joints—how often have you said you
would give anything 2 the World for
a few hours comfort!
But wou didn’t know that all yo\ had
to do to get real relief from this nerve
wracking_ misery was just to build
rich, red blood, did you? You didn't
know that rheumatism had to be
stopped from the inside by destroying
the impurities that cause it—by build
ing millions of red cells in your poor,
weak blood, did you?
Until you fill your system full of
healthy, rich, red bloo! you will never
end your rheumafim}.i S. 8. 8. will
surely help you. Thai's because S.S S.
AT RIS S P SRR M TR T PRI AT TR LR
BEAUTY FOR YOU! 8
+ Don'’t envy your friends, you too may have the full 0574
rounded contour of perfect beauty. ¥ g|3R |
Ivani Tissue Creme, and Beauty Balm—%xeparations made & |l |
after the secret formulas of a famous Spanish beauty, are now ==
offered to you for the first time in America.
This marvelous combination —a boon to women — enables you to develop
flat bust, thin neck, arms, limbs or face. Simple directions plainly given in booklet
“A Beauty Secret for You” enclosed in each package. Positive‘liy will not grow hair.
Act Tocla{—Send $5 money order or send name and address and pay post
man $5. We will send you the combination in a plain sealed package. We pay postage.
SCHUDER LABORATORIES, 309-311 Hanna Building, CLEVELAND, OHIO
.
l Robust Mother of Five
*
' Healthy, Happy Chil
* *
dren Keeps Fit with
’s Pills
Beecham’s P
“When I feel a dizzy headache
coming on, I take one or two
Beecham’s Pills.
“] am 33 —a healthy, robust
mother with five happy children,
thanks to Beecham’s. 1 do all my
own housework, besides sewing,
a washing, ironing and caring for
the children.”
Mrs. ALBERT ORMEROD
- Fall River, Mass.
‘ For FREE SAMPLE—write
. B.F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York
Buy from your druggist in 2§ and §o¢ boxes
i For constipation, biliousness, sick head-
I aches, and other digestive ailments take
Beecham’s Pills
| RO NAR
’
| Grove’s
g _
| Tasteless |
\Chill Toni
| omic
| *
- |ls an Excellent Tonic for
.
. |Women and Children. 6oc
SINGING CANARIES, $5; Talking Parrots
and cage, sls; Baby Monkey, §25. PUPPIES;
| Fox Terrier, Irish Terrier, Bull Terrier, Rat
| Terrier, Collie, Spaniel—female, $5; male, $lO.
Airedale, Poodle, St. Bernard, Newfoundland,
Eskimo—{female, $10; male, sls. Boston Ter
rier, Pekingese, Pomeranian, German Police
- —female, $25; male, $35. Chow Chows, Rus
sian Wolf Hounds. Satisfaction guaranteed,
| Ship anywhere $2 deposit, bal. C.O.D. Cat. 10e,
ißiddie's. 23 N. Sth St, Desk 4, Phila., Pa.
—
' Ladies—lmperted European Novelties, Gift
packages. Wonderful things of intérest to
women. Send dime for particulars. Big mail
and beautiful introductory gift. Ladies
only! Cha-Nin, 1224 Unlcn Ave., New York.
OPPORTUNITY—Get dainty Pure Glove
Silk Underwear for yourself free and make
money selling it to others, THE DORA
LYNE CO., 23 E. 26th St, NEW YORK.
Agents—To Sell Copper-Trimmed Miniature
Cedar Chests, satin-lined, filled with finest
chocolates. A repeater. You can make $lO to
SSO a day. $1.50 commission. Sample and
complete outfit, $2.50. Returnable in ten
days if you wish. The biggest seller of the
season. First application gets exclusive
rights. Imperial Mfg. Co., Grand Haven, Mich.
MAKE s§s2o DAILY—Why work for others?
Make your own product; we show you how.
You can't lose. 23c brings full instructions
Send today. STUART, Box 138, East Liberty,
PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA.
Florida Property Owners, we have customers
for vour Florida property. Send legal descrip
tion, price and other information. The Gables
Co., 1027 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, Fla.
Agents—=Re¢ll knitted silk & balbriggan dresses
direct from factory. Big commissions. Ex
perience unnecessary. Write today. Pearl
Yarn Co., 2400 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
T BUY FLORIDA LAND—BIG PROFIT
Ten-acre tracts five hundred dollars; easy
payments. Get map. GCLDEN CYCLE
REALTY CO., 710 N. E. Second Ave,, Miami,
W. N. U, ATLANTA, NO. 40-.1925.
| helps Nature build the red-blood-cells
-1 that fight off the impurities that cause
‘| rheumatism. ¢
} Conquer rheumatism! S. S. S. has
shown the way. For generations
1 S. S. S. has brought blessed relief and
| comfort to thousands of rheumatie
| sufferers. i
{ When the rich, red blood that
| S. S. S. helps Nature build goes cours
ing -through - your system, it purifies
| 'the-blood in your body. Rheumatism
| vanishes — skin blemishes disappear
|—you begin to get hun
(gry again and enjoy
| your food—strength and
| power fill your body—
{you are vigorous— red-
Iblooded and ready for
action. Know this joy of
| living again! Take S, S. S. and banish
| rheumatism! :
Get S. S. S, from any druggist. The
| iarger bottle is more economical.