Newspaper Page Text
"
ruuic
i th” Treatment i f Colds,
ll ' G /jnne r nd Flu, Capa tone
■ \ Scientific Preparation,
pix 'cr.i>ed and Recoin-
jaemied by Physiciana and
gurteona.
Aq
lief, '
Heai
Cr;
for I'
tins’-
one i ■
bai K '
result;
> ■ rrr, trp and instant re-
f< r.r i f tflfecting the
; merit-
i.i 1 ijih’y rccomr.-.c.'.dcd
, i! f», liturclyie, iheime-
■ rvous hctdiuhe, trervuus-
i r/'n, ccrecfce, ;.r.d Iccth-
j.j.ftio for !T,c cr COc, take
; .id ask for your money
i are net satisfied with
is sole by all drugstores.
Cap-
didpain disturb
YOUR SLEEP?
T he pain and torture °f rheu
matism can be quickly relieved
iiy an application of Sloan o
Liniment. 11 brings warmth, ease ana
temfort and lets you sleep soundly.
“Always have a bottle handy and
.only when you feel the first twinge.
It tindratcs without rubbing.
It’s splendid to take the pain out of
tired, aching muscles, sprains ana
Wains, stiff joints, rnd lame backs
For forty years pain’s enemy. Ask
^AntH druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40.
SloartS
Linimentp^
No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled with Worms have an un-
Jeilthycolor, which indicates poor blood, and asa
rale there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance.
CROVF. S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regu-
luly lor two or three weeks will enrich the blood.
In prove the digestion, and actos agenernlStrength-
enlns Toni ■ to the whole system.t Nature will then
itrowoflor dispel the worms, and the Child willba
hperfect health. ITcasant to take. COc per bottW
Sycamore, Ga., 18.—A cooperative
poultry tale was liol at the tobacco
tvareUovsc at Asblurn Wenesday.
This sale was arranged by tbs Tur
ner county farm agent in order to
>ifng t e buyer anil teller closer to
gether, also to give the po. ltry raiser
opportunity to teal'ze better
p.icei on tlie.r poultry* *. Turkeys
brought as high as So cents per
poriH' and hors 23 cents. The sale3
will take place monthly.
Mrs. Williams Tells How
Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable
Compound Kept Her
in Health
GEORGIA HIGHWAY ATTORNEY DISCUSSES
ADVISABILITY OF BIG ROAD BOND ISSUE
By G. H. HOWARD; Attorney Georgia Highway Bo a rd
Overneck, 0.—“ Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound helped me both
before and after my
baby was born. I
suil'ered with back
ache, headache, was
generally run down
and weak. I saw
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound advertised in
the newspapers and
decided to try it.
Now I feel fine, take
care of my t^jo boys
and do my own work.
I recommend your medicine to anyone
who is ailing. You may publish my testi
monial if you think i t will help others. ’ ’—
Mrs. Cabbie Williams, Overpcck, Ohio.
For more than forty years Lydia E.
Finkham’s Vegetable Compbund ha3
been restoring women to health who
suffered from irregularities, displace-
ments, backaches, headaches, bearing-
down pains, nervousness or “the blues. ’
Today there is hardly a town or hamlet
in the United States wherein some
woman does not reside who has been
made well by it. That is why Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is now
.•ocognized as the standard remedy for
such ailments.
Are Your Walls and Ceilings Up-to-date?
Thera U really but oneway to properly finish the wails and ceiling*
cf your home—give them a coat of a flat-drying oil paint, lika
Lucas Lu‘Co-Flat
Lu-Cc-Flat dries with a beautiful, toft, velvety finish, entirely with*
out gloss. It is just the kind of finish you will like for every room
of your house. You can use: it with equal success in the bathroom,
kitchen or laundry, for moisture and dampness will not affect it
in any manner. Lu-Co-Flat can be applied over any surface with
assurance of good results, if tne plain directions for its use are
carefully followed. It is made in a fine assortment of attractive
shades. Let us show them to you.
J Oliver & Kidd
Paints and yarn!shes
The Tttock Signals
Are Working
s'
In some respects, human experience
is like railroading.
Every moment of tlic business and
social day the block signals are giving
right of way to keenness and alertness
—while the slow and the heavy must
wait oij tlie sidetrack for their chance
to move forward.
The ability to "go through” and to
"get there” depends much on the poise of
body, brain and nerves that comes with
correct diet and proper nourishment.
That's why bo many choose Grape-
Nuts for breakfast and lunch. Served
with cream or" milk it is completely
nourishing, partly pre-digested, and it
supplies the vital mineral salts so
necessary to full nutrition.
Grape-Nuts has a rich, delightful
flavor, is ready to serve on the instant
—and is distinctly the food for mental
and physical alertness and speed. At
all grocers.
"There's a Reason"
for Grape-Nuts
I have been over many m'les of the
ctafo system of roads and those who
have traveled these roads In the past
and since their improvement will
agiee with me that the progress in
road building- In Georgia during t e
past two years has been wonderf l in
spite of high prices and many ad
verse conditions.
Many cf the county commissioners
have conferred with ms and have
been callers at the Highway Depart
meat, and in spite cf tho financial
;rtoblor.is that have been and: aie
now confronting them, there can ba
no doubt but that L ey expect tc en
ter upon the work for next year with
splendid energy cud enthusiasm and
the public may expect good results
by the end of 1922.
Chairman SlraUan is winding up
the work cf his department prepara
tory to turning the chairmanship o”er
to Mr. Holder on January 1, and t e
new chairman will have no friend who
will v.ioli him better success than
will the retiring chairman, who ear,
always be proud of the foundation
work in a great system, so largely
the result of his untiring energy and
unselfish work in behalf of the peo
ple cf Georgia.
t No employe at the department ex
pects less of Mr. Holder than a wise,
able and successful administration
, and I am sire he will find that ho can
depend upon faithful team work and
cooperation so necessary to the suc
cess cf so great an undertaking, lie
will find that lie lias undertaken a
‘man-sized job in the biggest depart
ment of a great state, and that the
promise of a successful administration
has been made brighter v.itiv the
gradual re urn to "normalcy” and
more favorable conditions than have
obtained since the department was
organized.
Several counties have made prepa
ration for cooperation upon a greater
scale by the issue of county bonds,
and other county commissioners arc
now seriously considering the submis
sion of bjnd issues to their people.
There io already some discussion,
also, cf a state bond issue, which Is
likely to be voted di ving the next
few years, and perhaps within the
next two or three years, and there
seems to be a growing sentiment in
Congress iu favor of larger financial
aid in the highway program. State
highway bonds hay's already been vot
ed In ten states, among them being
Illinois, $60,Oil,000; Michigan and
Pennsylvania each ,$50,000,000; Cali
fornia, $40,000,000; Minnesota, $75,-
000,000 and West Virginia, $50,000.-
000. It will be noted that most, if
not all of these states, already had
many millions of bonded indebted
ness, many time3 larger than Geor
gia’s debt, and some of them, at least,
already had better road systems
than Georgia.
It l;a3 been pointed eat that tho
present automobile tag fund will pay
the principal and interest on about
$32,000,000 of state highway bonds.
| without levying any general tax and
| some seem to favor an issue ol that
I size. They point out that the coun
ties may then devote all their local
funds to improvement of connecting
roads, leaving the state funds to the
r>,r,00 miles of stato system.
I have heard others suggest an is
sue of $75,000,00 and that $7,500,000
of bonds be sold annually for ten
years, thus saving tho interost on the
issue until tho money is needed and
the bonds sold, paying the interest
out of the tag fund and providing a
sinking fund for the retirement ol
1. e principal o t cf the same f. nd,
as far as it will go, devising ro ne
plan for raising the small additional
imount that may bo required to ’: y
the bonds in 30 yc-ars.
Should Gov. Hardwick’s plan for
supplanting oub present tax system
with an income tax be adopted, and 1
believe it will be, it may be that tbc-
gar.olinc tux can bo used for payment,
of road bonds, also, which may solve
the problem of paying the principal
and interest of a $75,000,000 bond i
sue, and also the overhead expense
of the state department.
It may be regarded as reasonably
certain that practically all of tf 8
itates will Issue highway bonds with
in the n"xt five years and, if they do,
combining their funds with federal
aid in all tho states, within ten years
there will be a magnificent system of
highways throughout the country.
Georgia cannot be left out of tbit
great highway program nnd I have
tto doubt whatever but that tho Gen
eral Assembly will soon give this
matter earnest nnd thoughtful con
sideration. I will not bo surprised,
indeed, if thero is not somo diu e.s-
lon of t’e matter, at least, wh u tho
legislat ro meets next summer.
Personally, I believe wo Will have
fine, stale highway’ organization
with Mr. Holder at its head, and ex
perienced and able members of tho
board end highway engineers associat
ed uitu him. I b iieva this organic.t-
ion can bo entrusted with the build-.
ng of a great system of permanent
highways and that work nu-.y Le^ln
aimu.lr.nccusly in all the ccunU.33
under the provisions cf the present
• a "\ with some slight amendments
intended to improve, ratiior than
chango tho system, just n3 soon as
bonds are Issued. In tho meantime, a
great work will be done, but nccc-s-
tarily much of tho present fund must
be used for maintenance and tem
porary work, which must bo renewed
eften nnd from time to time, anlil
we have a permanent system.
nine difpin gvats are
DYNAMITED AT AMERICUS
Americus, Ga.. Nov. IS— Niro dip
ping vats were dynamited in Miller
county during Thursday night, Ur.
W. D. Martin, government veterina
rian stationed hero> announced today.
Dr. Martin is directing tick eradica
tion work in this district and rcecntly
move Jhis headquarters here from
Cambridge. Ho returned last night
from an inspection trip through the
lower counties, whore bo found the
dynamiting lin’d be:-i dore. A rpe-
oial investigation of tho affair will be
.ttade.
Washington, Nov. 18.—That stock
biokcr either thoug'.'.
brokers, cither thvrugh lgnorar.co or
malic, will not discriminate between
cotton and sinters is a very serious
matter to the South, Senator Dial oi
South Carolina, contends in let'ers
addressed today to tho Bureau of th:
Census of Hie War Department.
Newspapers duily contain i.tat -
ments of stock brokers, according La
Je n t oar., hsrd
Jan;u.,r Dial, sat.lag out the bales of
ct.cn ah uatly
Leg > c’.tj bo “tored i-i various South
ern warefcoiiEQS. It too fro - :,r.iy
•oHrv.’j that t.’.o bttiii-jf il in ihtlu;.,
"Today It i ; - routed that there a -
in Charleston 198,000 bale.3 of ert-
ton,” said tho senator. "I telegraph
ed for the facts. Of those bales, 1cS-
COO are linters belonging, iu great
pait, to tv:e war department. 1 have
arlted the bureah of census to differ
entiate between linters and cotton,
and have asked the war department
t o t sit taohrd ETAOISH HR Duke,
to get its llutcr3 out cf the country.
"For the value of cotton is de
creased and the mark-! 1 ; depressed
every time it is printed that vast
numbers of these bales are in stor
age!. There is very 'iltle cotton la
tho South. But cne would not so
judye if he followed the papers
u ich print the estimates of .tech
brokers.”
IB 14 Uil IMfl
"LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN” I* a speclaDJK
prepared Syrup ionic-laxative for Habitant
Constipation. It relieves promptly bat
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 day*
to induce regular action. It Stimulates and
Regulates. a Very Pleasant to Take, a 60r
per bottle.
Wo keep in slock at ail time;
a complete line cl high • gia-'.l
typewriter libbont. for all
make machines/
The Milledgevlile News
are found
only in
Healthy Livestock
Old Reliable Mustang Liniment
■tops lossesby keeping stock healthy.
SOOTHES while CURING
No Alcohol — No Sting — No Torture
Mustang Liniment is made of pure,
healing oils. When rubbed freely
into tlie hide, it penetrates muscle
and tissue to the bone, thereby over
coming the ills of cattle, hogs, sheep,
mules, horses, etc.
C. vl Julia Lester, JacksonvHle, Ga.—
v u /* "I used your Mexican Liniment
on a cow of mine that was suffering from
a caked udder. She was relieved in 1 day
from suffering and completely cured in
about 5 to 6 days.”
John H. Fisher, New Berne, N. C.—‘‘Ot:r
delivery horse was so badly stove up in his
fore leg and shoulderthat we could not use
him. By using Mexican Mustang Liniment
on him he was completely cured and re
stored to the best of condition.”
rper WITH 2Se TRIAL BOTTLE
A IM515 _ a solid brass “Put-and-
Take" TODDLE TOP. Latest craze—get
one 1 Send 25 cents in stamps or coin for
Trial Bottle (HouseholdSize) Mustang Lin
iment and get Toddle Top.absolutely free.
Lyon Mf g. Co., 41 So. Fifth St., B’klyu, N. Y.
25c—SOc-$ 1.00
Sold by Drug and General Storea
“The Good Old Standby Sine* 1848”
MEXICAN
MUSTANG
LINIMENT
One Night Only, Friday, Nov. 25
The Musicle Comedy Sensation
'-and he tipped
me
WITH ACKNorrLCOGSMdHT 70 Zf.C.l
I met a friend
THE OTHER day
• • e
WHO STARTED to rava
• • •
ABO JT A musical comedy
* * *
HE’o SEEN the night before*
* • •
HE B008TED so strong
• • •
t THOUGHT perhaps
* • *
HE WAS drawing a salary
• • •
FROM THE show
* e - at
AS PRESS agent.
* * T
HE SWORE that the
* • •
GIRLS WERE the prettied
* * •
COMEDIANS THE funnleit,
• * •
COSTUMES THE niftiest and
• » .
PCENr-r/ THE classiest
OF ANY show he’d see*
• • »
IN MANY moons > $
• * •
I LAUGHED at him\
* *
AND TOLD him that
» « e
MOST SHOV a were hums
AND STALE and dull.
• • •
BUT HE made mo pfomlso
. * •
tF I got the chance
» • •
TO SEE this show, and
* * *.
BY LUCK last night
. •
I WAG in a town
• •
WHERE THE allow was b!
* *
SO I took it in
• •
AND I must confess
• • •
B'GOSH HIS praise
see
WASN'T HALF strong enough
« * e
THE SHOW is called
JAM^J E
Prices 50c, ^!.00 and $1.501 !us Tax