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ROYSTER’S
!AD« MkKK
ij »
REO(8Te(»60. •
THE GOODS FOR YOU
:t'.i V
IN 33 YEARS
The Quality Hh#Never Fsiied :
, •: The o^rnersj^p and manage-
|i ?f have n^yer • changed %
‘•■••v $'•*• ■f.--'.’ «,*nf i '■■ i T’ ■ .-i • /.ii. ■».' '<>
The sales have grown from
450 tons to 400,000; tons;
: . k. k
F. S. ROYSTFR GUANO CO.
Norfolk, Va., Baltimore, Md., Toledo, 0., Tarbord, N. 0., Charlotte,
N. C., Colombia, S. G., Spartanburg, g. C., Atlanta, Ga.,
Macon, Ga,, , Columbus,. Ga.. I Montgomery, Ala.
Washington, N. 0., Norfolk, Va.
THE M GROSS | |
By FRANK MORRISON, '
Seoretary American Federation of
Labor.
The work of the Red Cross is pot
confined.to our boys on haul. field or
in hospital nor amidst ihe ruins of Hel-
glutp {in<| other portions,of; devastated
Europe.-, One of it? great activities is
any necessary aid to tha depi mien's of
members of America’s military forces.
On the battlefield the Red Cross pre
sents ah heroic 'figure. In America,!
removed fromdestruction and death,'
the Red Cross steps silently to the
‘side of the fhtliVr and mother whose
boy is “over the^e" and who heed cduu.-j
jsejJidajLd.
No service Is too small for the Rsdj
Croats If allotments from the govern-l
merit or from their , son are delayed, on
■ Information on the government's war risk:
insurance is wanted, the Red Cross Is 1
both counsellor arid Mend. It enters intsj
the home in the true spirit of oharlty-H
secrecy. . • fi
attentive care possible. Nothing we can
do Will ettuall their share. Jn this Viiapya.,
msnt for world democracy, and the Red
Gross presents 1 , an opponun.ttjr'for us to
pli^F odr K part in this g?sat drains by
contributing to the extant «f our ability.
The Red Cross appeals to organised
: workers :..beflsu4* . Of It* «Bto ; . qnnlUy--
serivloe. - ■ ' • -.. ” , -<•
MAKE SOLDIER FEE1 HE
k
FREE PHOTO OF MARSHAL h
HAI6 IN NEXT SUNDAY’S
ATLANTA. AMERICAN
Handsome Rotagravure Photo
graph of Field Marshal Sir
Douglas Haig, Commander
Of The British Armies,
In Next Sunday’s
Atlanta Amer
ican.
In each copv of The Atlanta Sun
day American of January 12th, will
be included t. beautiful rota gravure
photograph of Field Marshal Sir
Touglas Haig, commander of the
armies of Britain, and one of the
greatest of British generals.
The ..ame of Haig will raijk with
those of Marlborough, Wellington and
Kitchener in British history.
It was Haig who took hold of the
British army and wplded . it into a
fighting machine which helped repulse
and defeat the Imperial German
Army.
It was Haig who won. the Battle
i the Somme in the Summer of 1916,
“lies after
8eek Healthy View Point.
If you desire to posses a broad,
healthy point of view, observe the
horde of restless, unhappy men and
women who have failed to find happi
ness through a Worship of false gods,
and who find it only after having
fouud a purpose that would effectively
serve humanity. They will teach you u
lesson on the futility of striving after
the things that serve no useful end.
(Set a healthy- viewpoint upon life! •
! Safety Matches Cause' of Disease.
j "Four writers la turn,” says the
• tJgeskrlft for Laeger, Copenhagen, "de-
f scribe cases of eczema' which they were
unable to explain In the otherwise
'healthy patients fintlT.they learned ttf
Rasch’s. experience with., local poison
ing of the skin from the use ©f a cer
tain brand of safety matches. In most
of the patjents the burn was on.the
thighs corresponding to the trousers
pockets in which they carried the
match 1)ot“s.” ;" k > .
CHICHESTER SPILLS
LADIES t
Aak your DruRflat for CHI-CHBS-TBR’S
DIAMOND BRAND PILES in Rtco and.
Gold metallic boxes, sealed with Blue
Ribbon Takb no other. Boy oF you
Drigglit. and aak for om.OHB8.TEB S
DIAMOND BBAND PILLS, for twentv-fiw
years regarded as Best, Safest, Always Reliable.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
TRIED EVERYWHERE
Men disabled in the-eeiylce.wbo are
rreturbihg from the front and who find
'•It bard at first to see their way to-
fj.war,d iearnlng a livelihood pre.fi,spec-
jclal problem for the Red Cross, lin
ger the Smlth-Seurs law a fund Is bp-
:'propria ted to re-educate every dis
abled man whp will take the opportu
nity to make.a living. It is felt that
fiuch men are likely to be weakened
{In their.resolution to keep their self
respect and find real work by the mis-
! taken charity of hero worshippers, who
{ 'will forget them dnee the first flush of
-war enthusiasm is over. Here the sup-
i {port of the disabled man’s family must
!be enlisted, for in the last analysis it
|is the man’s family who will be the de-.
terminlng influence In his rehablllta-
i 'tion. .The relatives rnufit be braced to
. .meet the situation—to make of them-
selves-for the man a bulwark against
{ discouragement apd weakness.
8MILES AND TEARS GET MIXED.
is worth more'to
family life today
than ever before
THE COMPANION giveathejgreatest
amount of everything worth reading,
an abundance-of •Fiction, of Entertain
ment, of Informing Reading, of Fact
and Humor, besides the Special Pages
for each one of every age. It appeals
to the families With highest Ideals, t
OFFER No. 1
52 WEEKLY ISSUes
ImmedSate order* Wifi
rycewe Companion Home
£®K8J!2£“ |0 ”
, t OFFER No. 2 ..
THE TOOTH’S COMPANION 1 AHW
«-°°! $0.50
McCALL’S MAGAZINE $1.00 ) “
Check your choice and send this coupon with your
remittanceto the PUBLISHftS. OF THIS PAFCK;
or to The Youth’s Companion, Boston,
SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE
* ' 'V '• rft. - ^1 , , J t 1 l'
B Y «; O N M 1 1>|6 H EkL
rV <-.V .■•v?’?:.
I resH aitid Cured Meats Pitre
Telcpbone Numbn tt
Fire, Life, Accident and Casualty
Insurance
Good, Strong, Reliable Companies.
Agent Prudential Life Insurance CJo.
Phone 451 205 Jackson Bldg
Lay of the Last Hen.
"The Lay of the Last Minstrel” may
have caused some apprehension In its
day, but were the lay of' the last hen
to be announced in ours there would
certainly be a panic.—Seattle Post-In
telligencer.
Hie Last Hope Gone.-
In an Oklahoma court an attor
ney had been many times'"overruled
by the court during the morning ses-
Blon. The attorney arrived In the
court room at 1:35 p. m., whereas
cotlrt had adjourned to 1:30., The
court and the attorney disagreed as
to what was. in fact, the correct time,
and the discussion ended with the
despairing statement 'by the attorney:
Superstitions of Seamen.
If a man Is ill at sea, his most crit-
cal time Is when land is first sighted.
If he survive an hour after the siglit-
ng of land he will recover. On some
.tawlers whistling Is forbidden—It
icares away the fish. Other skippers
>elleve that to wash your face In the
Diddle of a trip will break a spell of
Aim weather. •
the first victory of He Allies
the defense at the Marne and at Ver
dun,
This Spnng When the Allied cause
looked darkest, it was Haig who call
ed upon his men t& fight wltli their
‘backs against the wall”, and they I Very well, your honor. Let’s have It
"S“ 8 . thev did under, ,/ellington < h at way. I had' hoped, however, that
at Waterloo anc. Nelson at Trafal- ‘ -
irar.
Be sure of getting your copy by
seeing The Georgian Ameri-art News
Agent in your city today, and get
him to enter your order for the Sun
day American of Jar 12th. Delay
may mean disappointment* as only
the issues of The Sunday American
ordered in advance will be published..
ir=»0
It
1
«
the time qf day was one subject on
which we- might agree.”—Law N Jtos.
A. F. Brookshire Agt., 45 Main St.
To Cut Paper.
When you lose your., knife or do not
j* ve a pair of scissors at hand for .cut-
Ung the paper a common pin or needier
any kind serves, the,purpose admiijv
thly, says Popular Science Monthly. If
" ls a single sheet from which the
tupping is to be removed, lay the part
°p another paper, hold the pin, slant
wise so that the point will follow
around the clipping, Just as. if tracing
,8 outline. Pass back over the
lcrntch with the point In the lead and
you will be surprised how smoothly
'fie pin cuts the paper.
No Worms In ft Healthy Child
AH Childs troubled with , worms have an uu-
^. aUh y color, which indicates poor blood, and aa a
rn^.yioJ 8 more or less stomach disturbance.
ROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly
nmvA?iR r i, hree weeks will enrich the blood* im
en?nrt T' he , dlSe8aon ’ * nd actaaa GoneralStrerigth-
» n c t0 *ho whole system. Nature will then
in dispel the worms, and tho Child will be
*o Perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60p.per bottle.
Early American. Diplomats.
The first American minister to
France was Thomas Jefferson, who
represented this country under the
Confederation and during the revolu
tion before the Constltutlpn wrs adopt
ed, and. the United States was organ
ized. After the adoption of tlie Con
stitution, the United States was first
represented In Franc# by ‘William
Short sis charge d’affhires (1790) and
.then by Gouveneur Morris (1792) as
minister.
Masonry in the Revolution.
During the American Revolution
craft lodges were found In many of
the English reglmehts in America,
and a number of them existed in the
Continental army. There is a record
of ten regularly constituted, acting
under warrants an., attache I id the
Continental regiments. is claimed
that General Ln-ayette was made, n
Mason at Valley Forge during thr
American pet dutjon, but R. F. Goult.
states ih his history of Masonry ttirtt
Lafayette was raised by tlie Ameri
can Union lodge at Norristown, N. J.
It was in the Amerlcun Union lodge
that the first resolutions were passed
urging the election of a general grand
master for the United States.
There can be no doubt
u to the merit of Cardui,
the woman’s tonic, in
the treatment of many
troubles peculiar to
women. The thousands
of women who have been
helped by Cardui 1h the
past 40 years, is conclu
sive proof that it is a
good medicitie for women
who suffer. It should
jielp you, toe.
Thke
Two little stories came to the Red
Cross headquarters from over the seas
( a short time ago. One was a. story of
{bravery that brought the tears, and
one a tale of tears that brought smiles.
The first story was of a soldier who
Asked for a light. He was In bed, and
*a cigarette was between his lips, plac
ed there by tlie nurse after she had
{finished spreading his blanket up
;smoothly. At his question, she turned
land gave him a box of matches and
I hurried on, theh. remembered that the
arms beneath the blankets were with
out hands.
Nurses have to be without tears, but
there were tears in her eyes as she
turned to strike the match and light
the cigarette for him.
"Quit that,” he said, "they were good
units, and they helped g«»t three or four
Germans before I lost them, but they
ain’t worth' crying about, so there!"
And the tears story that brought
smiles ? Well, * that wag the. story of a
big, husky, colored man, who sat read-
ling, and the Red Cross worker at the
; canteen saw; that he had tears'running
• down. hlf .cheeks. |She was curIons to
{tyoctflr wha{ h * might be reading. and
was aotqnlshed when she looked oyer
•his.shoulder to see tbit. It was the
i canteen cook book..
' He smiled through kfb tears as he
isaw that she was watching, and said;
i sheepishly, “You sure must excuse me,
ma^am. bnt this here book done make
ime blamed homesick. I’m 'shamed to
{make a baby outeu mabise’f, but this
i makes me think o’ liome.”
Tonic PP
Mrs. N. E. Varner, of
Hixson, Tenn., writes:
my suffering indescriba
ble. I can’t tell just how
and where I hurt, about
all over. I think ... I
Cardui, and my
'less;
I am
seret
Fw
until Fwa
remarkably strong for a
woman 64 years of age
Ido all nty housework.’
Try Cardui, today, E~76
RED CROSS WOMEN'
CITED FOR BRAVERY
{ . American women at Epernay, south
of Rhelros, have been cited In an order
of th day fot; remaining at their; posts
In an American Red Cross canteen un
der bombardment for six days.
Throughout this battle they continued,
to feed and care for wounded. ..
■ . •
4 *
♦ WHAT RED CR088 MEANS.
♦ 4*
4* Your membership In the great 4> i
♦ American Red Cross means the 4-
♦ mothering of those'little children 4»
4> made desolate by the invasion of 4<
♦J* the Hun. Mrs. Lars Anderson in ❖
4» her recent book on* conditions 4*
4*' over there says: “It is the poor, 4»
♦ homeless, motherless kiddles that 4*
4* somehow make-ail the other hor- 4
♦ rors of war fade away into dis- 4*
♦ tance. These frightened, crying, 4*
♦ dying, innocent children, who do ❖
4* uot know what It Is all about— ❖
♦ they wring your heart dry.” 4*
» 4> + ♦ 4^ 4* ♦ ♦ ♦ 4* 4* ♦ ♦ 4* 4* 4* ♦ 4* 4i
MONEY TO LOAN AT 5 AND
On farm lands And city property. 1 Two to firo ywts fun.
H. V. JOHNSON, Ckinesvalta, Ga.
* Phone 479 and 856-W. 311 Jackson Bldg.
^——assai
Life
. C. HAM
^ Fire Acadent
INSURANCE
Bailey Bldg.
Telephoning in Japan.
The editor of the Japan Times says
the telephone service in Japan is ut
terly- bad. He wonders^ "what .Job
would have done had he lived In Tokyo
and wanted to telephone to the special
ist on boils.” He concludes with the
following Incident: "A lady in Karul-
zawa called up her h#use in Tokyo, left
by the next train, got the .pall and
talked to herself in Karulznv(a six
hours after she' arrived in Tokyo.
That’s not a Joke. It’s the solemn'
truth.”—From the East and West
News.
Doing Right.
Everything on earth has jts price,
and sooner or later we pny for all that
we havq. When we.complain, that do
ing right takes so much toll of effort,
sacrifice, and the lbsps of what we cnil
"success," we have only to look about
us to see that evil-doing is more costly
still. Its demands may come la on the
Installment plan, but they will fie all
the more exorbitant because of that.
WOOD’S ANNIVERSARY
Gives the fullest and most
up-to-date information, not
bidy aboujt Seeds that can be.
jpmoltea; to advantage, but
also dbout crops ' that ’ prom
ise to give the largest profits'
during the coming year.
OUR 40 YEARS', EXPERIENCE,
and . an equipment that Is unsur
passed In this country, give us un
equalled advantages for supplying
THE BEST OP
Farm and Garden Seeds
Write for. Catalog and Prides. of
GRASS and CLOVER SEEDS,
SEED OATS, SEED CORN
and SEED POTATOES;
Catalog Mailed Free on- Request.
T. W. Wood & Sens,
SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va.
For the Beat of .Gardens,
PLANT WOOD'S SEEDS.
One. nfla»
pat (ml *WattF tosMtass -onl
We daas ant MmMb OMlMK wmll %efo
UMml Wte&k as* yams (dost
spots tn doUMn GMi'eNtt OMaiMd^u
presses aaHla-. aaawe iaiWia>>»i>n«te y
than » dttmxhair Wk Absolute
guaraptaa ««j pbaca.e*
out of aot-aiMMs. - Br waasar’* <* u
ing price to yam wo:
wa haG ratWiettfimiAatta®.
ther Avre goo® : wodk Sec ar*re ouo
than to have: ek easy ipfice
." » wl serine sl
14 in fHmrHkri
. Treeing Use Aff.UgKeMlFo,
' first UghtsASav Utw- wa*
estabHshod in Kog^aauB Si ifte
mouth at tha- Tiyrmawft. 'Otoe ttt
this couniry wan Lha iq
Chesepeakorijasr*. am WBOmi&tosy «pit
Sandy nook. no%v wea-
feet was establfehiftdHn. A*. light
vessel was* pteml. «xr r&atteraa
in 1824 hud »4reVs-s«i la
|,82T, and » aMfrewi
again in this GengaaMh gwaitlgn un
til 1897, atom vsatmesmtoto snttempta
had. be«t mada t», m U^«Oteauae
op Uiamootf SboadL