Newspaper Page Text
n
TM'.ARST'S ‘-'TA'IHY UIKIUC.W VTLANTA. OA .. ST’XDAY. ►YKMKF.K 1. 19*4.
LUCILE' TELLS AMERICAN
SILK MAKERS THEY EXCE
Famous Styles Creator Praises Quality of Do
mestic Goods, and Says by Forgetting Their
Bashfulness They Can Capture Market.
By LADY DUFF GORDON.
(The Famous “Lucile” of Fashion.)
NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—I have had the moat interesting expe
rience lately—and a new one—and, therefore, of infinite valm- By
in’dtation of the Chamber of Commerce of Paterson, N. .J., 1 visited
their Industrial Exposition and National Silk Style Show. I came
away full of wonder at the extraordinary opportunity that the war
in Europe affords America to control the whole silk trade of this
hemisphere at least.
It is not a new thought entirely with me that the Paterson
ritks havs been too much neglected in
| ADV DUFF GORDON,
* J tile famous “LlH'ile,
who declares makers of
American silks aro too mod
est in talking of their wares.
their own country. Particularly in
the United States does the old Idea of
not being a prophet in ones own
country have force. There is here
too much worship of the "imported''
label.
Let me digress a moment concern
ing the overemphasis of the value of
the "imported" that is so evident
here. It Is really not a digression,
because it relates closely to your
present opportunities.
To my mind the worship of the
“imported" label in the United States
has some curious philosophical
phases. A young nation is usually
either absurdly distrustful of itself
along certain lines, or absurdly arro
gant and self-confident Particularly
does this tendency show itself in the
a ns. To my mind the United States
is a perfect example of the first ten
dency—a«* Germany Is a perfect ex
ample of the other side of the matter.
The United States by turning at least
one-quarter of its back to its own
wonderful silks and seeking abroad
for foreign-made ones Is, Inversely,
committing the same stupidity as
Germany, brutally destroying the
Rheims Cathedral and then blandly
telling us that it can he "restored" by
German architects!
U. S. is Too Modest.
I do not mean, of course, to com
pare these two things themselves—to
link the rather likeable shyness of
the one thing with the detestable
horror of the other What I want to
bring out is that there can be too
much national modesty Just as there
can be too much national arrogance.
But this national modesty, this
feeling that because something or
othe** is made “abroad" It must be
better, is Just one phase of the mat
ter.
There is also the desire to have
something “exclusive," something dif
ferent than one's neighbor, the fas
cination of “paying more for it." an
element of snobbishness And all
these factors have keen constantly
played upon by those whose interest
it has been to do so It’s a rather
banal thing to say. but so many
Americans do not seem to understand
that a high price for a thing doesn’t
at all necessarily mean a high value.
Nor do I think that the satisfaction
a woman may get out of saying to
another, "Why, yes. my dear, it's im
ported," is a true satisfaction; unless
—and this is the whole point—the ar
ticle she refers to is really intrinsi
cally better made abroad.
Some Imports Justified.
There are some things that they
make abroad which are really better
than the same class of things made
in America, and if one likes these
things, then it is intelligent to get the
best. But if something is made just
as good or better here, why should
you pay for the ocean trip of its for
eign cousin?
As to the ‘exclusive" idea—of that
T am strongly in favor. I believe in
having things that .ire one’s very
own. But you do not get true exclu
siveness from just a piece of fabric—
taste, arrangement, personality and a
host of things enter into It. One can
exclusively wear a nose ring and yet
not be admirable. And some can
wear a dress of which there are a
thousand duplicates and create the
Impression that it is the only one of
its kind in all the world. There Is an
extraordinary amount of humbug In
that word “exclusive."
At Paterson 1 went through a num
ber of the mills, and 1 looked thor
oughly over all the exhibits of the silk
In the exposition buildings. And hav
ing done so, I honestly can not under
stand why, with such opportunities :n
liis own country, any American should I ^houild Jake
buy imported goods. In every way
—and I have handled much silk
abroad—I consider the quality of
these goods can hold its own with
the best of the French manufactur
ers
There is only one thing In which
there might be improvement a dis
tinct improvement and that is .n
some of the designs and colors.
I consider that in the lives <>f ev
eryone there is given a chance,
whether In business or private life
and we either take it or leave It. an 1
It is up to us w’hich we do The silk
manufacturers here This year have
this chance—they have the chance of
tr
k
BUCHU FINE FOR
WEAK KIDNEYS
Mixed With Juniper Is Old Folks’
Recipe for Clogged Kidneys
and Backache.
Most folks forget that the kidneys,
like rh* bowels, get sluggish ail
cl srged and need a Hushing occ»-
Fi ruiily. else we have backache a il
dull misery in the kidney region, se
vere headaches, rheumatic twinges,
t- rpid liver, acid stomach, sleepless
l.f.-s a. •: r11 sorts of bladder disnr
dors, dizzy spells, spots before the
ey« 8. frequent desire to urinate To
av Id above troubles you simply mur-t
keep your kidneys active and clean
by taking a spoonful of Stuart’s Hu-
chu and Juniper Compound after
meals. Also stop eating sweets r
sugar This Is old folks' recipe f >r
strengthening weak kidneys and blad
der. in a few days your kidneys \v 1!
then act fine and natural. Stuart's
Buchu and Juniper is harmless t<>
flush clogged kidneys and stimulate
them to normal activity. It also neu
tralises the acids in the urine so it n
longer hurts to pass water, thus end -
i bladder disorder: and strength-
ri£ tne kidneys.—Advertisement.
proving to the world that their sjllks
are just a* good as any other silks
offered on the market in Europe. With
this war on, and all the foreign mills
shut, they car. do so if they are only
enterprising enough and determined
to do so.
Have No Competition.
They will have no competition.
They will have things entirely in their
own hands Think of it! All they
have to do is to prove to the dress
makers and the buyers in America
thal they can supply all the silk
needed, and in satisfactory quality,
design and color.
Then, if they are able to do this,
when the war is over and things have
taken their normal turn again, I con
sider that it will he most unpatriotic,
to say nothing of being most unbusi
nesslike, for any dressmaker to go to
Europe and buy silks. And 1 don’t
believe they will go.
But the manufacturers must prove
It. They must strive to get better
designs and better coloring, and they
must not let anything interfere with
getting them, and they must use every
means which is known to do so. I
myself, in the American models I in
tend to make In the near future, will
use American silks, and the more they
please me the more will I use. And
what I do many others will do
Those German Dyes.
Let me make my position plain
once more. I repeat that as far as
the quality of these American silks
is concerned they are Just as good as
the best in Europe. And many of
them are Just as good in coloring
and design as the best in Europe.
But it is the duty of the manufac
turers to make all designs and color
ings as good or better than the best
in Europe. They can do it with a
little trouble, ard isn’t the opportuni
ty worth it? 1 don’t know of any
more magnificent one anywhere.
It has been said that the requisite
dyes and chemicals to get the best
effects can not be made in this coun
try; that they must come from Ger
many. And, of course, they are not
being made there now. It is current
ly believed that there is some mys
terious quality in the water, the n.r
and earth of Germany that can not be
duplicated elsewhere. This is arrant
rot!
It is a delusion painstakingly cre
ated and fostered by Germany in its
long campaign to make the world n
lieve that the Germans have pow *rs
other nations have not. It is sick* n-
ing that America has allowed itself t.*
be hypnotized by such talk, which is
well understood abroad as simply
part of their commercial propaganla.
Matter of Formulae.
You have great chemists here, great
scientists. What a German has done
surely you can do; and what a Ger
man has discovered surely you can
discover. It is only a matter of for
mulae. A little time, a little experi
mentation and a real desire to accom
plish are all that are necessary.
And even if it were so, if there
were some occult property about the
Germans dyes—-a Heaven-sent "ex
clusive” secret—what of it? The mills
are closed abroad. You are all then
is in the field You can discover other
dyes, other chemical compounds. And
when the war is over you can get the
German dyes, if you haven’t discov
ered something Just as good or better,
just as anyone else can. If there
were something basically wrong with
the quality of the American silk it
would be harder, of course but tin
quality is perfect.
There is all over the United States
an increasing "Made-in-America”
awakening. The silk manufacturers
ry advantage of It.
They should push their goods in
South America, in England, Italy
everywhere that the foreign-made
silks have been bought. Let them use
the period of the war for educating
the world upon the excellencies of
their product. If l were a silk manu
facturer I would get every bit of cap
ital I could, enlarge my plant as much
as I could and go into the biggest
campaign for expansion that I could
conceive. 1 know what the rewards
would he.
Colors and Designs.
But I would also on my base of
perfect quality of silk rear up a
Structure of perfect colorings and de
signs. If all the American manufac
turers would do this not only would
the appalling number of hundreds of
millions of dollars that go abroad
each year for foreign-made silks flow
into the*r pockets, but many more
millions that come from other parts
j of the world would follow them
Think of it—an unknown number
j of months without the least competi
tion to show what you can do!
And don't be so bumble. I found
all the people in PaterFon far too
humble as to what they were able to
do. They must change their attitude
of mind and just know that their
goods ; re just as good ns any on the
world's market, and if anyone says
they are not, they must prove that
thov are. and if they can't do It now
with this unique chance I am sorry
for them.
Perhaps you will wonder why I,
who am an Englishwoman and love
France, should read a lesson against
"importations." And I’ll tell you. I
have a house here in America also,
and my intelligence and sympathies
touch hands with those of Americans
Further, I do not believe in “labels.”
T thi~k to use a homely phrase "ev
ery not should stand on Its own bot
tom."
Coming Requirements.
Also I believe that excellence. ~ood
workmanship, truth and the first-rate
t(Tines are not confined within geo
graphical boundaries T believe there
will come a time when no one will
nek "Whs this made in Paris'"’ Or.
"Was this made in London?" and so
on. Thev will only ask themselves.
"Is this rood? Is it the best?" And
whether it Is or is not. the matter of
what country it comes from or what
kind of national flneers made it won’t
matter a ha’penny.
But if one makes a marketable
thing in one’s own country as good
as th;:t thing Is made abroad, and can
sell it cheaper, the people of that
country ought to buy it.
I would hate to believe, and 1 do
not believe, that people buy my
gowns because I designed them in
Paris, or in London I like to believe
that whether in New York, or Lon
don, or Paris, they buy them because
they find them good. I raised my
houses in these three cities, not be
cause they were New York, Paris or
London, but because each of these
places is a great center, where suc
cessful people gather. Discernment,
good taste, fineness eleganoe—these
are universal things. They do not
depend on maps.
And so I say to the .vilk manufac
turers of America: "Your product is
as good as the l est. Sell It."
And to the consumers: "The Amer
ican silks are as good as the best.
Buy them "
Kansan Has Been a
Mason for 61 Years
POTTER. WANS., Oct. 31. Bolter
boasts of a citizen who has several rec
ords. David II. Sprung has been a Ma
son lor sixty-one years, anti was secre
tary of Kick a poo Lodge, No. 4, A. K.
anti A. M . for thirty-two years. Kick-
apoo Lodge, which now has its head
quarters in Potter, is the fourth oldest
Masonic lodge in Kansas.
<)n account of poor health Sprung
came to Knr.-as in 1867, abjure,; the
law, and engaged successfully in farm
ing. He is now retired at the age of 81.
Sprung raised nine children, eight of
whom became school teachers.
U. S. Navy Dry, but Nothing Like
That Goes for the Argen
tine Fleet.
Fisheries Planned
As Course in School
SEATTLE, < et. 31. The first school
of fisheries in Die United States has
been established a' th“ University of
Washington through the efforts of
United States Fish Uommissloner Hugh
Smith, who for some time has urged
such an innovation.
Initial steps were taken with the es
tablishment of a hatchery on the cam
pus. With the assembling of the State
Legislature the university will ask for
an appropriation to increase the capacity
of the undertaking
City to Build and
Operate a Railroad
ROSEBURG, (TREG., net 31. By a
majority of more than three to one the
voters of Ros* burg authorized the is 1 -*' - I
a nee of bonds In the sum of $500,000, !
with which t" assist in the constructio i
of a railroad between Ror.eburg and .Coos
Bay.
Concurrent with voting the bunds,
the voters elected a railroad commission
composed of ten prominent business men
t< handle the project.
Ship Held in Harbor,
Without a Country
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 31. —A ship
without a name, country or clearance
papers, but with a full cargo, .swing'-
idly at anchor in San Francisco Bay.
The vessel is or was the Alexandria,
formerly of the Kosmos Line. Recently
she was r* ported sold to the Northern
ami Southern Navigation Company,
which applied to Washington for per
mission to register their purchase as the
Sacramento under the new shipping \rw
NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—American
forward and British aft, with an up-
to-date and very cozy little cafe amid
ships, the new Argentine superdread
nought Moreno went to sea at 1
o’clock yestreday afternoon. The Mo
reno, which was built by the New
York Shipbuilding Company, in Cam
den, N. J., came to New York a few
days ago and, quite unheralded, pro
ceeded to the navy yard to have her
hull painted. That Job was finished
late Saturday, and yesterday the Mo
reno went out for sea trials upon
which her acceptance depends by Ar
gentina.
During her short stay in the navy
yard the Moreno attracted much at
tention. Naval officers especially were
interested, for there is only one other
ship in the world like the 27,600-ton
Moreno, and that Ih her sister ship,
the Rivadavia. And the Moreno, too,
so far as officers at the navy yard
know, is the only battleship with a
cafe.
Ship Cozy Within.
Secretary Daniels disapproves of
cafes and everybody in the navy,
from the greenest stoker to the top
flag officer, knows it. If one went
through the Atlantic fleet w r ith a fine
comb he could not find enough intox
icants to make a baby Jolly.
But it’s different in the Argentine
navy. The Moreno is spick and sp in
outside and cozy within. Everywhere
there are guns, among them an evan
dozen of the newest and most power
ful 12-inrhers. But the cafe has been
put where the jar from the big guns
will not shake the glasses off the oar.
for the Moreno’s drinks are served
over the cutest little bar on any of the
seven seas.
In old days, when drinks other than
grape were to he found on American
ships, they were kept in the officers’
lockers, and hospitality was not al
ways convenient. On the Moreno he
Argentine officer touches your arm.
whispers, "Have one on me,” and
walks you right up to the bar. There
a neatly uniformed mess attendant
sees that you are as well served as
you might be in the best New York
refectory.
"Cafe Squad” Unnamed.
The Moreno’s "cafe squad" has yet
to he officially designated by title. It
has been suggested that the nomen
clature run something like "bartender
of the first class,” "bartender of the
second class.” "chief master-at-arms
of the cafe,” "beer yeoman,” "wine
yeoman" and so on down the list.
But the cafe !s a very small part of
this new superdreadnought. In ton
nage she is about the same as the new
American superdreadnought New
j York. Forward she looks much like
the New York, for she has a latticed
j mast and the turret arrangement is
similar to American construction. ACt,
the Moreno has a pole mast like tho^e
on the British Iron Duke dread
noughts.
Besides her main battery of twelve
12-Inch guns, the Moreno has a sec
ondary battery of twelve 6-inch and
sixteen 4-inch guns. She is design'*,1
for 22.5 knots, and will cost about
$12,000,000.
Pastor’s Wife Will
Take Care of Babies
ST. LOT7I8. Oct. 31- No more babies
cry at th* services of the McCaualund
Vvenue Presbyterian Church, nor. on
the < ther hand, will mothers feel obliged
To have their babies
The t^iKtor’F wife, Mrs. David Reiter,
! is to have charge of a Sunday nursery
* in the church. She will care personally
! for all the babies whom the mothers
| wish to bring. The room of the primary
Sunday school is to be devoted to this
^purpose. Dr and Mrs. Relt»r hfk¥«
j two children of their own, the mothers
I of the congregation undoubtedly will
feel well satisfied with the arrangement
Says Women Farmers
Are Equals of Men
WICHITA. Oct. 31.—Women aro
Just as efficient farmers as men. Miss
Pearl Mitchell declared at the In
ternational Dry Farming Congress.
Miss Mitchell has been a farmer
seventeen years, and said that there
are 200,000 successful women farm
ers in the United States.
i School Gives Credit
For Home Behavior
YATES CENTER. KAN’S., Oct 31.-
The public schools here have adopted
the plan of giving credit for homework,
such as washing dishes, cooking, sweep
ing, making the bed and observing prop
er rules of .«■ anitatlon. Parents will bo
required to make regular reports of the
conduct of the students at home.
A grade of ten points is to be given
to the child who manifests a cheerful
spirit at home each day.
i Flower and Window Garden
Conducted by IV. B. CorreU
WINTER-BLOOMING BULBS.
Foolish
To Suffer!
Zemo Stops Itching and Burning
Quickly and Goes Right to
the Root of Your Skin
Troubles.
Get Your Free Trial Bottle.
It is foolish to endure the torture of
itching and burning skin when Zemo
can be depended upon to
bring complete relief in a
jiffy. It is foolish to suf
fer the embarrassment,
humiliation and discom
fort of eczema, pim
ples, dandruff or other
skin troubles when
Zemo (the clean, non-
/. greasy liquid) stands
ready to drive out
these diseases for you,
as it did for the thou
sands who have writ
ten us of Zemo cures.
There’s nothing "hit
or miss" about it;
you can depend upon
Zemo all the time.
Buy a 25c bottle to-day from your
druggist, or send your address and 4
cents (for actual postage) to E. W.
Rose Co. Laboratories, Dept. 33, St.
Louis. Mo., for free trial bottle (in plain
wrapper) that will very quickly over
come your doubts.
Zemo is sold and guaranteed by drug
gists everywhere, and in Atlanta by
Frank Edmondson Drug Co.. Coursey &
Munn. E. H. Cone Drug Co., Elkin Drug
Co.. Gunter-Watkins Drug Co.
Got to Go Deep to
Cure Rheumatism
Liniments Help Locally, But
the Disease Is Way Down
Inside.
To get at the source of rheumatic
pains it requires the deep, searching
influence of S. S. S.. the famous blood
purifier. Rheumatism is primarily a
blood disease thot, since it is In this
vital fluid that rheumatic.tendencies are
carried, lodges in the Joints and mus
cles, there to Irritate the nerves and
produce pain. And in order to drive
out these pain-inflicting poisons it re
quires S. S. S. to sink deep into the
tiny glands imbedded in the innermost
tissues. 8. 8. 8. travels wherever the
blood goes and never loses Its medicinal
influence. This explains why it over
comes the most chronic forms of rheu
matism. why it dislodges those hard de
posits that thicken the joints, for it
acts as a solvent and assists the blood
to provide in the tissues those natural
elements for which the body-building
process continually craves and must
have.
If you have never used S. S. S. for
rheumatism, get a bottle to-day of any
druggist. Use it as directed and with
some simple home helps you will soon
J dethrone the worst and most painful
forms of rheumatism. Write the medi
cal department. The Swift Specific Co.,
63 Swift Bldg.. Atlanta, Oa., for addi
tional advice. Yours may be a case
where a slight help from a specialist,
whose advice is free, will solve the mys
tery that has been making life miser
able for you. When you ask for S. S.
S. insist upon it and refuse all substi
tutes.
Several weeks ago I had something
to say about winter and spring
blooming bulbs. There was consid
erable delay this year in getting our
usual supply of European-grown
bulbs, but they are here now—plenty
of them—and about the finest lot of
stock ever seen In Atlanta. It is not
i too late, by any means, to make your
planting for indoor blooming, and
| you will have until the latter part of
; December to make your outdoor beds.
A great deal has been said about the
proper soil for this and that plant,
but not enough stress has been put
u£>on the most vital point In success
fully growing anything—indoors or
outdoors—and that Is, proper drain
age. in planting in pots it is not
enough to simply lay a piece of
broken crockery or small rock over
the hole in the bottom and then fill
in with soil. The soil soon gets
packed and drainage is impossible.
| In the bottom of each pot, according
to size, you should put from one to
two inches of coarse coal cinders,
broken flower pots, pebbles or ehar-
| coal, large enough not to wash
through the opening. On top of this
! put a layer of dried grass roots or
sphagnum moss; then, by mixing a
| little sand with your potting soil you
r
FADED, GRAY HAIR JUST BEAUTIFULLY
LAWN GRASS SEEDS.
M’MILLAN BROS.’
“DRUID HILLS” LAWN
GRASS SEED.
This will form a rich, deep green,
velvety lawn in a few weeks’ time. It
) Is composed of various grasses that
grow and flourish during different
1 months of the year,^so that a beautiful
green lawn can be had all the year
round. Sow at the rate of 60 pounds
per acre, or, for small lawns, one
pound to 20 feet square. Price, pound,
30 cents.
M’MILLAN BROS.’
LAWN GRASS FOR
BERMUDA SOD.
The grass that we supply for this
purpose will give a beautiful green
lawn all through the winter. Pound,
20 cents.
M’MILLAN BROS. SEED
“ARCH" (‘<0 “BOB"
12 S. Broad St..
(Note Our Number.)
Atlanta.
will be able to keep It porous and
open open at all times.
Nothing makes plants turn yellow
and die so quickly as stagnant water
around their roots. Re sure of your
drainage and you can hardly over
water your plants. !f you set a pot
into a Jardiniere be sure and place
some material in the jardiniere for
the pot to rest on, else you will have
trouble.
Most of the bulbs that are offered^
in the fall can be forced for indoor
blooming, and all require about the
same soil and treatment except the
Poetlcus Narcissus, which will not
force well and usually requires a
heavy, wet soil. I never try to grow
them indoors, although there are said
to be some varieties suitable for forc
ing. The Alba Plena or double white
narcissus will not bloom at ail ex
cept in the coldest kind of clay soil.
They will grow all right in light sandy
soil % but when it comes to blooming,
they simply will not.
In potting your Easter Lilies it is
unnecessary to cover them, because
they have a peculiar habit of growth
and demand a different treatment
from other bulbs. They have two dis
tinct sets of roots. One set grows
from the base of the bulb, the other
from the stalk. Plant the bulb low
in the pot, filling in with soil after
the stalks shoot up. The upper roots
are Nature’s provision for suppjrt
or extra anchorage.
Harmless but Effective—Mixed
With Sulphur Makes Hair
Soft and Luxuriant.
1 ACRE YIELDS 125 BUSHELS.
CARRINGTON. N. DAK., Oct. 31.
What is said to bo the record for North
Dakota Is reported by Isaac Nystad.
| He secured 125 bushels of bailey from
jiine acre. Fertilization of the land and
I cropping to potatoes the previous year
i are the reasons given for the mammoth
yield.
The old-time mixture of Tea
and Sulphur for darkening gray,
•treaked and faded hair is coming in
vogue again, says a well-known
downtown druggist. It was our
grandmother’s treatment and hun
dreds of women and men. too, are
j again using it to keep their hair a
good, even color, which is quite sen-
| sible, as we are living in an age when
a youthful appearance is of the great
est advantage.
Nowadays.’ though, we don’t have
the troublesome task of gathering the
sage and the mussy mixing at home.
All drug .stores sell the ready-to-use
product called "Wyeth’s Sage and
Sulphur Compound" for about 50
cents a bottle. It is the most popular
because nobody can discover it has
been applied. Simply dampen a swift
brush or sponge with "Wyeth’s Sage
and Sulphur" and draw this through
your hair, taking one small strand at
a time. Do this to-night, and by
morning the gray hair disappears and
after another application it is re
stored to its natural color.
What delights the ladies with
Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur is that be
sides beautifully darkening the hair,
they say it produces that soft luster
and appearance of abundance which
is so attractive: besides prevents
dandruff itching scalp and falling
hair. Here, you gray-haired folks,
get busy; look years younger.—Ad
vertisement.
SE E DS^ PLA NTS A N D TR E E S,
SEED OATS—1.000 bushels Appier oats
for sale. Apply to W. F. Camp, Camp-
ton, Ga.
FOR SALE—Two thousand bushels of
Appier oats. They are absolutely
pure. If Interested, call on or address
W. M. Klsberry. Rockmart, Ga.
STRAWBERRY PLA NTS—Klondykes or
Missionary $2.50 per thousand, cash
with order. N. B. Hull. Starke, Fla.
CABBAGE plants by parcel post. 500
for $125. Beaufort Island Plant Corn-
pan y, Beaufort, S. C.
EARLY HEADING, frost-proof cabbage
plants; all the standard varieties; $1
per thousand: 5,000 and over 90c. f. o. b.
shipping point. F. E. Hull, Rock Hill,
S. C.
SNEED NURSERIES, Morrow. Oa.. will
mail your catalogue free. Fruit trees,
plants, vines, pecan trees, etc.
JH OTBED^8ASH^
We carry in stock
HOTBED SASH
3 ft. by 6 ft. and 3 ft. by 7 ft.
You will need them for
your Fall garden.
WILLIN GHAM-TIFT
LUMBER CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
Main 1395.
PE RE NNIAL PLA N TS.
SHASTA DAISIES,
COREOPSIS.
THESE plants are now
ready and should be put
iu the ground at once if you
want an abundance of beau
tiful flowers all next spring,
summer and fall at a tri
fling cost. 50c per dozen.
M’MILLAN BROS. SEED
COMPANY,
12 S. Broad Street.
C H RVSANTH E M U MS.
FOR SALE—Two thousand very large
and handsome chrysanthemums;
white, yellow and pink; 1.50 per dozen.
Will deliver prepaid within second zone
Address Jessie Young or Atkinson Drug
Co.. Madison, Ga.
CHOICE Chrysanthemums, $1 to $2 per
dozen, prepaid; violets, 15c per 100.
parcel post. Mrs. W. D. Bennett, Mo-
lena, Ga.
How To Make the
Quickest,Simplest Cough <E>
Remedy
Much' Reiter than the Rea.
Made Klml and lou Save $2.
Fully Guaranteed
KOMomao
This home-made cough syrup is now
used in more homes than any other
cough remedy. Its promptness, ease
and certainty in conquering distressing
coughs, chest and throat colds is really
remarkable You can actually feel ik
take hold. A day’s use will usually
overcome the ordinary cough, relieves
even whooping cough quickly, splendid,
too. for bronchitis, spasmodic croup,
bronchial asthma and winter coughs.
Get from any druggist 2U* ounces of
Ptnex (50 cents’ worth), pour In a pint
bottle and fill the bottle with plain
granulated sugar syrup. This gives you
at a cost of only 54 cents—a full pint
of better cough svrup than you could
buy for $2.50. fakes but a few minutes
to prepare. Full directions with Pinex.
Tastes good and never spoils.
You will be pleasantly surprised how
quickly it loosens dry, hoarse or tight:
coughs, and heals the inflamed mem
branes in a painful cough. It also stops
th** formation of phlegm In the throat
and bronchial tubes, thus ending the
persistent loose cough.
Pinex is a most valuable concentrated
compound of genuine Norway pine ex
tract. rich in guaiacol. which is so heal
ing to the membranes.
To avoid disappointment, be sure and j
ask your drngglst for *2’, ounces'
Pinex." and don’t accept anything else !
A guarantee of absolute satisfaction,'
or money promptly refunded, goes with
this preparation The Pinex Co., F<
Wayne. Ind. Ad vet i iseoiciit.
A STATE FAIR
UNDER AUSPICES OF THE GEORGIA STATE AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
MACON, GEORGIA
November 3 to 13, 1914
An Exposition ol (tie Resource? oi the South and oi Georgia
wmmmmtmmm tmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm—mmmmm, mmmwn mmamsmamm, r\imm — iiibu.-i—■ jmbumum «i—wmmammm mmmamKmmmmmrmm mmmmmmmm wmmmm twir'i-iii mu————
The finest Exhibits of Agriculture, Live Stock, Swine, Beef Cattle, Dairy Cattle,
Poultry and Canned Products Ever Exhibited in the South.
SEE WHAT THE OTHER MEN ARE DOING TO MAKE THEIR FARMS SELF-
SUSTAINING, AND WITHOUT RAISING COTTON. A SYRUP MILL IN
OPERATION; APPLES, THE FINEST IN THE WORLD; PECANS, WORLD-
BEATERS; GEORGIA ORANGES AND ALL VARIETIES OF FRUITS.
Every Citizen in Georgia and the South Is Urged to Visit the Georgia State Fair and See What Georgia Produces
SIX DAYS HARNESS RACES
Reduced Rates on AH Railroads
The Biggest Midway Ever Assembled ALL Premiums Wit! Be Paid
JULIUS H. OTTO, President
HARRY C. ROBERT, Secy & Gen. Mgr.
■HBKBBannH.