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DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGLASVILLE, GEORGIA.
SIX MONTHS I
COULD NOT WORK
Lydia E, Pnkkam’s Vegetable
Compound Made Me Strong and
Able to Work—I Recommend
It To All My Friends.
Bayonne, N. J.—"I had pains in back
and lew so that I could not stand caused
by female trouble.
I felt so tired all the
time, had bad head
aches, and for six
months I could not
work. I waa treat
ed by a physician
and took other re
medies but got no
relief. A friend told
me about Lydia E.
Pinkham’s V e g e-
table Compound and
i t h a s helped me
very much I am well and strong and
now able to do my work. I cannot
thank you enough and I recommend
your medicine to my friends who are
sick.’’-Mrs. Susie Sacatansky, 26
East 17th St., Bayonne, N. J.
It must be admitted by every fair-
minded, intelligent person, that a medi
cine could not live and grow in popular
ity for over forty years, and today hold
a record for such wonderful success
as does Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, without possessing great
virtue and actual worth. Such med
icines must be looked upon and termed
both standard and dependable by every
thinking person
Vaseline
Reg. U. S. Pat. Off
CARBOLATED
PETROLEUM JELLY
A clean, counter-
irritant for
scratches,cuts,
etc. Healing
and antiseptic
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES
CHESEBROUGH MFG CQ
(CONSOLIDATED)
Stale Street Newark
Take SulphtjrBaths )
at home for<
iUMATISM
Gout, Eczema, Hives, etc. Right in
your own home and at trifling cost,
you can enjoy the benefit of healing
sulphur baths.
Hancock
Sulphur Compound
remedy—SULPHUR—prepared In a way to
make its use most efficacious. Use it in the
bath; use it as a lotion applying to affected
parts; and take it internally.
60c and $1.20 the bottle
at your druggist’s. If he can't supply you..
•end his name and the price in stamps and
we will jend you a bottle direct.
HANCOCK LIQUID SULPHUR
COMPANY
Baltimore. Md.
Hanttk Sulphur C*mp*u
nunt—ZSc and 50t—f>r uu
KING PIN
CHEWING
The tastiest
tobacco you
ever tasted.
MOTHER!
•‘California Syrup of Figs”
Child’s Best Laxative
Accept “California” Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most harm
less physic for the little stomach, liver
and bowels. Children love Its fruity
taste. Full directions on each bottle.
You must say “California.”—Adv.
Grasshopper Bait.
A year ago the grasshopper ate up
nearly $100,000,000 worth of our win
ter wheat. Science at once set about
devising some scheme to control this
pest. They mixed a concoction, on an
enormous scale, known as “grasshop
per halt,” making 4,565 tons of it, or
enough to till ISA large railroad cars.
To mix this, halt they used 500,000
lemons, eighty-three tons of white ar
senic and other ingredients in similar
proportion. The halt was then scat
tered over a great area in Kansas.
The grasshoppers ate it freely, with
the expected result. This year there
are no grasshoppers hi Kansas.—
Beys* Life.
URIC ACID IN MEAT
CLOGS THE KIDNEYS
Take a Glass of Salts If Your Back
Hurts or Bladder
Bothers.
If you must huve your meat every
day, eat It, but flush your kidneys with
salts occasionally, says a noted au
thority who tells us that meat forms
uric acid which almost paralyzes the
kidneys In their efforts to expel It
from the blood. They become slug
gish and weaken, then you suffer with
a dull misery In the kidney region,
sharp pains In the hack or sick head
ache, dizziness, your stomach sours,
tongue Is coated and when the weather
Is had you have rheumatic twinges.
The urine gets cloudy, full of sedi
ment, the channels often get sore and
Irritated, obliging you to seek relief
two or throe times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to cleanse the kidneys and flush off
tlie body’s urinous waste get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar
macy here; lake a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys will then
act tine. This famous salts Is made
from the acid of grapes and onion
juice, combined with littilu. and has
been used for generations to (lush
and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also
to n- utralizo the acids In urine, so It
no longer Irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
.Tad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in
jure. and makes a delightful efferves
cent lithia-water drink.—Adv.
ATLANTA HONORS
CONFEDERATE DEAD
GENERAL WRIGHT, MARSHAL,
WITH AIDS FROM AMERICAN
LEGION POSTS
STATE HEWSJF INTEREST
Brief News Of Importance Gathered
From All Parts Of
The State
Atlanta.—In loving tribute to those
who, in the dark days of the 60s laid
their all on the altar of sacrifice for
the Southern Confederacy, Atlanta ob-
rved Confederate Memorial Day with
wealth of sentiment that has not
dimmed with the passing of the years.
The prime feature of the day’s pro
gram was the big parade which moved
through the downtown business dis
trict out to the resting place'of the
Confederate dead in Oakland cemetery.
Business in Atlanta suspended dur
ing the afternoon in honor of the he
roes who wore the gray. The court
house closed at one o’clock and only
one court was in session during the
forenoon. Most of the business houses
on Whitehall street closed their doors
at one o’clock, while the public schools
observed the holiday. All banks closed
for the day and the federal buildings
closed at noon.
The parade started from the inter
section of Peachtree and West Peach
tree streets promptly at two o’clock.
In the column, escorting the Confeder
ate veterans from all the camps in this
vicinity, were members of the Amer
ican Legion, Sons of Veterans, Unit
ed Daughters of the Confederacy,
Spanish-American war veterans, high
school cadets and units of the R. O. T.
C. from Emory university and Geor
gia Tech.
Gov. Hugh M. Dorsey and Mayor
James L. Key, with state and munici
pal officials, rode in parade, while
many private citizens indicated their
desire to participate in the automo
bile division.
Judge Peter W. Meldrim of Savan
nah, one of the most distinguished
members of the bar in the South, was
orator of the day and delivered an ad-
dresH at Oakland cemetery. Volleys
were fired over the graves of the Con
federate dead by detachments of high
school cadets, while flowers were
placed on each of the mounds that
mark the final resting place of a he
roic son of Dixie.
Plumbers’ Strike Still On In Atlanta
Atlanta.—Negotiations between em
ployers and striking plumbers and
Btoamfitters who went on strike in
an effort to enforce a closed shop and
a wage of nine dollars a day, were
broken off, it is announced, after a
meeting of the strikers. Paper hang
ers, decorators and puinters have also 1 j ng
been on strike for several weeks for
similar demands. On behalf of the
plumbers and steam fitters. President
J. C. Curtright of the buil'dltig trades
council said the employers’ offer of
eight dollars a day and an open shop
was unanimously declined. "It’s an
open shop or nothing,” declared Sam
Shepard, churiman of the publicity
committee of the contractors.
Primary Election Very Close
Atlanta.—With the consolidated re
complete from all the counties and
counting the vote of Wilkinson coun
ty, winch held no elation, for Pal
mer, he will have in tlja May conven
tion 54 counties with 146 votes; Smith
46 counties, with 108 votes, and Wat
son 55 counties, with 132 votes. This
gives Palmer an apparent lead of 14
votes over Watson and 38 votes over
Smith.
It is Btuted that there is a probabil
ity that Chatham's vote wil be contest
ed on the ground that Watson’s name
did not appear on the ballot in that
county.
The total popular vote of 154 coun
ties shows: Palmer 48,460, Smith 45,-
668, Watson 51,977. This gives Wat
son 3,617 plurality over Palmer and
6,409 over Smith.
That Thomas E. Watson will fight
the proposed attempt by A. Mitchell
Palmer to control the Georgia presi
dential convention and name the Geor
gia delegates to the Democratic na
tional convention was indicated by a
statement issued by Benjamin M.
Blackburn, manager of Watson’s cam
paign.
Atlanta Hotels Boycott Potatoes
Atlanta.—A war on the high prices,
of the starchy subterarnean tuber
known to scientists as "solamun tuber
osum,” and to which patrons of the
boarding houses give the commonplace
name of "spud,” has been Inaugurated
by Atlanta rostaurauteurs. As a pro
test against the prices the restaurant
men admit are “prohibitive,” the Irish
potato has been abolished from the.
menus of thirty Atlanta hotels and
restauratns. The restaurant men say
they much prefer to discontinue serv
ing Irish potatoes than to advance the
prices to a point where the eating pub
lic might think the increase unjusti
fied.
Blackshear Youth Drowned In River
Blackshear.—Lloyd Culpepper, 16-
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. S. B.
Culpepper, of this place, was drowned
at Patterson landing on the Alapaha
liver, one mile north of Blackshear.
With a number of other boys he had
been swimming in the river, which was
almost out of its banks. The other
boys went some distance up the river,
leaving young Culpepper alone. On
their return to the landing they miss
ed him and immediately began search
ing.
Mysterious Shootin
Waycross.—A man who gives his
name as John Galalgher of Chicago
was myseriously shot by unknown
parties while asleep on a warehouse
shed. The man states that he was
hoboing from Chicago to Florida and
had just turned in the old warehouse
for rest when he was fired upon. He
was rushed to a hospital and is in a
serious condition. No trace has been
found of the parties who did the shoot*
Gets $10,000 Damages
Return Of Baby Ends Search
Atlanta.—A comprehensive search by
the police and detective departments
for the tour-months-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. S. P. Evans, No. 21 Colquitt ave
nue. carried away by his negro nurse,
was stopped suddenly when the nurse
reappeared at the Evaus home with
the baby. Mrs. Evans reported to the
police that she had left the baby in
Atlanta.—A verdict of $10,000 wiis the care of the nurse, a seventeen-year-
old girl, at Broad and Marietta streets,
while she did some shopping. That
was about 2:30 o’clock, and she told
I he girl she would return to the same
.place later. When she returned the
girl and the child were gone.
TOO
LATE
Death only a matter of short time.
Don’t wait until pains and aches
become incurable diseases. Avoid
painful consequences by taking
COLD MEDAL
World's Sleepiest Tramp.
A widely known chnrnMer, one Jul
ius Murder, called "the sleeping
tram’ ” has been arrested in Ver-
saill... according to the Manchester
Guardian. This occasion he Is charged
with the theft of rabbits.
The mornin before his arrest he
was found on In* Grand route by a
carter in a deep sleep, from which all
efforts of the latter failed to wake
him. In tin’ police station he woke
up for si few minutes, then fell asleep
again. It was found absolutely impos
sible to arouse him from slumber, ant*
In was sent to si hosplital, where he
I continues in tin* same state,
j Neither drunkenness nor lethargic
encephalitis have anything to dc with
! this curious case of one who must take
j high rank among the tired fraternity.
Ths world's standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric add troubles—tho
National Remedy of Holland aince 1696.
Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists
LmL lev the name Gold Modal on evair bex
and accapt no imitation
DEWSjOF EVE
No More Gentle Than
“Cascarets” for the
Liver, Bowels
NEW REVOLUTION LOOMS IN MEXICO!
Mail your friends a picture postcard from
revolution torn Mexico, signed by yourself,
under Mexican postage!
souvenli
w foreign lands
Puzsie* your friends" and have great fun
trinket. Travel by proxy
Send 26c, coin only, for samples and
details. Don’t delay; bullets may fly
dajrl Address Box 1490. El Paso. Texas.
It is just as needless as It Is danger
ous to take violent or nasty cathartics.
Nature provides no shock absorbers for
your liver and bowels against calomel,
harsh pills, sickening oil and salts.
Cascarets give quick relief without in
jury from Constipation, Biliousness. In
digestion, Gases and Sick Headache.
Cascarets work while you sleep, remov
ing the toxins, poisons and sour, in
digestible waste without griping or in
convenience. Cascarets regulate by
strengthening the bowel muscles. They
cost so little too.—Adv.
No really good complexion comes
out in the wash.
Some people believe that divorce*,
are made In heaven uud marriages In
the other nlace-
returned by a jury in the civil division
of the city court in favor of Mrs. Le-
la Thomas in her suit fpr $25,000 dam
ages against tiie Capital City Grocery
company for the death of her 10-year-
ohl daughter. It was alleged by Mrs.
Thomas that her daughter, Mary, was
struck and killed by an automobile [ property Damage At Brown’s Junction
truck owned by the defendant coin pa-i Carrollton.—A near tornado, hitting
/ while she was on her way home j Brown’s Junction, four and a half
om Lee street school, according to I m jj es suut n of this city, did considera-
itnesses, when the truck, said to j } j e d ama ge to property and injured
have been operated at a high rate of fieveral persons, Tho roof of the
speed, struck her. '1 he accident hap- central of Georgia railroad station
pened last September.
Raoul Elected Head Of Labor Body
Savannah.—At the closing session
of the Georgia Federation of Labor
convention in Savannah the following
officers were elected: President, W.
p. Raoul of Atlanta; vice presidents,
C. M. Morgan of Augusta, George Ha
ney of Atlanta, J. R. Bluff of Macon,
J. G. Valetion of Savannah and E. C.
Weems of Waycross; delegate to the
American Federation of Labor conven
tion, Ross Copeland; delegate to Farm
ers’ union convention, Luther Still,
of Atlanta; secretary-treasurer, J. A.
McCann, of Savannah. The next con
vention will be held in Atlanta.
Brunswick Delegation
Brunswick.—Final arrangements are
being completed by the Brunswick
board of trade for this city’s delega
tion to the Mid-West South Atlantic
get-to-gether booster trip, * which is
to start from Columbia, S. C., on May
15, and which is to be given under
the auspices of the Five-Port associa
tion, .Wilmington, Charleston. Savan
nah. Brunswick and Jacksonville. Ac
cording to reports received in this
city, all five of the ports are about
ready with their delegations.
Cave Spring Pastor Expelled
Rome.—J. H. Hardy, formerly min
ister of the North Georgia Methodist
conference, was found guilty before
a church trial on charges of theft,
usage of profane language and adul
tery, and was expelled from the min
istry and the church. The trial grew
out of a statement by May Robinson,
an Atlanta woman, who claimed that
Hardy took her from Chattanooga to
Atlanta during the recent conference
there, returned with her to Rome and j ^j g brotherhoods, has met
then disapepared with u sum of money , little encouragement in the S'
and jewels belonging to her. j 0 ij na city.
was blown off by the high winds. The
school house, a wooden structure, was
lifted off its pillars and considerably
damaged. Several houses were com
pletely demolished while porches of
others were blown down.
Good Roads Meeting In McRae
McRae.—Plans are under way for
a meeting of the Atlantic Ocean
Highway association here Wednesday,
May 5. Judge Max L. McRae, chair
man for the northern half of this as
sociation, has the plans under way,
unu he contemplates having delegates
from all along the line, including state
liiguway officials. A luncheon will
be served to the delegates in the grand
jury room at the county courthouse
here.
Letter Carriers Don Overalls
Atlanta.—Atlanta letter carriers are
permitted to don overalls, in lieu of
their regulation uniforms, according to
a telegram received at the Atlanta
postoffice from Congressman W. D.
Upshaw. Mr. Upshaw stated in the
wire that special permission had been
obtained from the postoffice depart
ment at Washington for the men to
wear overalls.
STRENGTHLESS
SEEMED DYING
So Weak She Could Hardly Move,
Says Indiana Lady.—One Bottle
of Cardui Put Her on the
Road to Recovery.
Tangier, Ind.—“Four years ago this
summer I was sick In bed,” writes Mrs.
Lillie McElwee, of this place. “I had
been under the doctor’s care for five
weeks. ... I was pretty bad, and I
was Just as nervous as I could be. . . .
I could not sleep at night until 10 or
12 o’clock. When I would doze off
and wake up I would be all of a trem
ble with nervousness.
“The doctor called my trouble
catarrh of the ... It gave me such
pains that at each one It would seem
that I could not bear another one.
Then I would chill . . . the pains
would just seem to shake me all over,
and the next day I would be so weak
I could hardly move. I would be so
utterly strengthless that It would seem
ns If I were dying.
“After one of my bad spells . . .
and I had almost died, I picked up
the Home Treatment Book and decided
to try Cardui. Before I had taken a
whole bottle, I could sleep at night . ..
I don’t remember just how long, but in
a short time I was up and helping with
the work . . .”
Over forty years of successful use
lias proven the value of Cardui in the
treatment of many common female
ailments.
All druggists sell Cardui, for women.
—Adv.
Kismet.
“I don’t want you to answer now,
Miss Pippin. Think the matter over
at your leisure and let me know what
your decision is.”
“I’m afraid I can never marry you,
Mr. Dobson.”
“Are you quite sure?"
“Oh, yes. For a while I thought I
might consent, but. you began to grow
one of those toothbrush mustaches
and then I knew it could never be.”—
Birmingham Age-Herald.
LIFT OFF CORNS!
Drop Freezone on * touchy
corn, then lift that corn
Off with fingers
Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little
Freezone on an aching corn, instantly
that corn stops hurting, then you lift
it right out. Yes, magic! No humbug!
A tiny bottle of Freezone costs but
a few cents at any drug store, but is
sufficient to remove every hard corh,
soft corn, or corn between the toes,
and the calluses, without soreness or
irritation.
Freezone is the sensational dis
covery of a Cincinnati genius. It is
wonderful.—Adv.
Prosperity brings with it ai
cation which inferior nature
resist.—Balzac.
intoxl-
Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills contain
nothing but vegetable ingredients, which
act gently as a tonic and purgative by
stimulation and not by irritation.—Adv.
i'ou may have noticed that few busi
es men feel at ease at a polite
I function.
The wise man
tree llmt bends
its base.
may he liki
but never
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
RE LL-ANS
i#FOR INDIGESTION
To abort a cold
and prevent com
plications, take
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, side and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
ThirtyRunnmgSores
Remember, I stand back of every box.
Every druggist guarantees to refund the
purchase price (60 cents) if Peterson's
Ointment doesn’t do all I claim.
I guarantee It for eczema, old sores,
running sores, salt rheum, ulcers, sore
nipples, broken breasts, Itching skin, skin
diseases, blind, bleeding and Itching piles
as well as for chafing, burns, scalds, cuts,
bruises and sunburn.
"I had 30 running sores on my leg for
11 years was In three different hospitals.
Amputation was advised. Skin grafting
was tried. I was cured by using Peter
son’s Ointment.”—Mrs. F. E. Root. 287
Michigan street, Buffalo, N. Y. Mall or
ders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buf
falo, N. Y.
THEY SPREAD
Kill AH Flies! DISEASE
DAISY FLY KILLER i
nything. Guaranteed.
DAISY
FLY KILLER
at your dealer or
5 by EXPRESS, prepaid, *1.28. . _
) SOMERS. 150 Do Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn. N. Y.
HINDERCORWS Removes Corn*, Cal-
fretfruaUrfi waHnne'easy. 11 ’l6c. by mail or at Drag*
clsta. illicox Chemical Works, FatcUogao, N. Y. '
What Have You For Sale,
Trade or Purchase?
Realty or personal property, anything, any
where. Write to Natl. Trading Service. H.
Rubinchick. Mgr. 31 Attorney St.. N.Y.CIty
500 NA.V
SERB,
247. Mo
Ne
JACK DEMPSEY, TY COBH AND BADE
RUTH are world champion* for the present.
•DANDRUFF HAMMER HAIR TONIC”
World Champion, not for an ago but
11 time. We guarantee it to positively
the most stubborn case of Dandruff In
vorlrt or refund your money. For local
trouble It Is n sure remedy. Cures
Shingles. Insect Poisoning. Pimples, Tetter,
" is und Hands; once a
Price $1.25 per bottle.
‘ “ ~ .. Desk B.
anted.
Chappe
Lips und Hands;
*1.25 per
nlc Co.. D
FRECKLES gSSSSSffi
Her “Ami.”
A little Munch* boy of three has
been spending the winter in Florida
with his parents, and the family 1ms
spent much of the time motoring to
ilu* coast towns. One day the mother
said to Bobby: “Today I believe you
and j^p;i and T will go to see Miami.”
•“’Fore 1 go,” said Bobbie, “I’d like
to know what your Ami looks like.”—
Tndianapolls News,
Rose To Organize Atlanta Yardmen
Atlanta.—Press dispatches received
in Atlanta are to the effect that G.
II. Rose, who declares himself to he
an organizer Cor the St. Louis Yard
men’s Association, will come to Atlanta
from Spartanburg, S. C., where he is
now working, among the union rail
road men. According to reports, Mr.
Rose, who seems to be seeking to or
ganize a union independent of the four
with but
South Oar
NAME “BAYER” ON
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Take tablets only as told in each “Bayer” package.
The “Bayer Cross” is the signature
of the true “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.”
The name “Bayer” Is only on genuine
Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
over eighteen years.
In every handy “Bayer” package are
proper directions for Pain, Cold.*
Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neu
ralgia, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica.
Neuritis.
T.’u boxes of 12 tablets cost only a
few cents. Druggists also sell !' Yejr
“Bayer” packages. Aspirin is th
mark of Bayer Manufacture o ‘
aceticueidester of SaltcyllcacK