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GIRI, BECOMES EDITOR
SBTILLWATER, OKLA., June 14-<A
precedent was broken At the Oklahomn
Agricultural and Mechanical College here
at tha annual student election When Miss
s
- - Bull Dog Brand
iy
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\ / Blow It Into Cracks— Where Insects Hide
)5,/ Comes in a clean, convenient holder—the Patented
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| fine stream of powder into any corner or crevice.
i
”I Made From Flowers—Safe and Sure
K Harmless to mankind, but quickly exterminates
4/ ! bugs. Kills flies and mosquitoes, also roaches, ants,
S bedbugs, and other plant and animal vermin. Use it
P in kitchens, around stores and hotels, and at house
%}\ cleaning time,
Al If you cannot buy Bull Dog Brand Fly and Insect Powder at your
r dei:‘ll".»' send us his name and 10c. We will mail you a package post
. .'t' paid,
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Aspirin is the tn;e mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid
—Advertisement
4 ITCH! |
~
4 A WAR-TIME ILL THAT'S SPREADING
Lo HUNT’S SALVE CURES IT!
2 BRED in the war trenches of Furope, a wave of ordi
nary ITCH is spreading over the country, This -km‘
diseage, history shows, has always prevailed, following
- wars and the concentration of armies. It was \-nmvnrmi
during the Civil War and following that conflict. There
was an_epidemic of the Itch after the .\'pnnmhAmfrl(‘nnl
War. Now history is repeating itself after the great,
g European ltrugfile_. {
K Returned soldiers and those with whom they come in
| contact will find a recognised remedy for the Itch in
AN g\ 1 Hunt's Salve, commonly fimnn as “Hunt's Itch Cure.”
/ A Many a veteran of the late 'oo's will testify to its merite
fl If directionk are followed HUNT'S “SALVE will
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0 ' | your druggist will tell you so. lle eells HUNT'S SALVE
’r' ‘ A under a strict guarantee to refund the purchase price te
“\ {4 any dissatisfied user
A Medford, Oklahoma man, among thousands whe
praise HUNT'S SALVE, says
“Some people dislike to call it the Itcl, but eandor compels me to admit
I had it badly Your Hunt's Salve, however, cured me after manv other
remedies had totally falled. One box completed the cure—~the first application
afforded wonderful relief. My advice thoze who have to s«ratl‘l. is to
*use Hunt's Salve.”
Hunt's Balve is especially compounded for the treatment of Itch, Eczema,
Ringworm, Tetter and other ftching skin diseases and is sold on our guarantee
H all reliable dmf stores, or it will be sent direct by mail {f your local druggist
nnot supply. Price ¢ per box
B. RICHARDS MEDICINE COMPANY, INC., SHERMAN, TEXAS
SOLD LOCALLY BY COURSEY & MUNN,
-
Weak, Nervous, Fretfulanßun-Down
> wor. While Plenty of Red
3 N Ry N 2 3 )
g () Blood Rich in Iron B )
Figewpt ‘ P N
| 1,578 !Helps Make Them ¥ D‘g
. Lol ol o R R
. "f{ ! Strong, Healthy s@fi?}t‘;ffi:\
; > J TN : . - RN
, L/ N 4{ and Beautiful. / s
N . \ A
R | How Organic Iron— ob 8 ofpaty
o s e L.
L PONEETEEN ey Nuxated Iron — Helps uy‘
i ( Solve Problem of Sup- ’@. -
v #if 1 plying Iron Deficiency, ‘i ,JQ ‘
315 ¥ : » ~ &
. i\, ! Thereby Increasing the {
R b |l4 Strength and Endurance l
o ; "4 of Delicate Care-worn ,
J" Bl { Women in Two Weeks ;
' ? B| / Time in Many Instances.
¥ i 'l
‘ : Many a woman who ought
u! J still to be young in feeling is
088 T loging the old-time vim and
. % energy that makes life worth living
- T > simply because her blood is thinning I
‘ # out and possibly starving through |"; '
o ’ lack of ifron. It is through fron in [ & .
P the red coloring matter of the blood 5
‘.3 - that life-sustaining oxygen enters t ;
8 hod nd enables the blood to change
food Into living tissue, muscle and
brain
Tn commenting upon the alarming fron deflelency in the blood of the
average woman of today, Dr. George H. Baker, for erly Physician a b
TR S TR T 1, -S RO Teps g T SR L T L L
surgeon Monmouth Memorial Hos
pital of New Jersey Sald:
“What worhen need to put roses in their
ehoeks and the springtime of life into ther
step I 8 not cosmetios or stimulnting drus,
but rlrnlr of gieh, pure red blood, With.
out it no woman can do credit to herscli
or to her work. Iron is one of the great
et of All streneth and blood bullders. and
1 have found nothing in my experience so
eoffective for helping to make strong,
healthy, ted-blooded women as Nuxated
Iron. From a careful examination of the
formula and my own tests of Nuxated
Iron | feel convinead that it Is & prepara
tion which any physieian can take himeeif
or preseribe for his patients with the ut
most confidence of nhmmm? highly ben
eficinl and satisfactory resuita”
Dr. Ferdinand King, n New York physi
olan and medieal author, says: “1 have
NUXATED:IRON
—FOl_'”R‘d —Blood. Strength and Endurance
Qrgce Sneary, of Carmen, was elected ed
itor of the 1919-1020 Orunfiu and Black,
the student weekly paper. It is the first
time that a girl has been elected to the
position.
i
K_\& g . ‘
\Lcé'
{l] /
'Sy
\°Q ; \
strongly emphnsized the fact that doctors
ghould prescribe more organie jron-—Nux
ated Iron--for thelr nervous, run-down,
wenk, haggard looking women "‘"""i
Lack of iron in the blood may often trans
form n beautiful sweet-tempersd v:mmm\
into one who (8 cross, Bervous and feritnblo
one who makes life & burden to herscif,
unbearable for hor husband, and Glgagr .
able for her children. When tha fron goes
from the blood of women, the roses go
from their cheeks ' |
If you are not strong or well you owe it
to yourself th make the following test:
See how long yow ean work or how far
{ou can walk with becoming tirel
Next tuke two five. tahlets of ordis
nary Nuxsted Tron th times per duy
after menis for two weeks. Then teut
your strength again and see how much
you have gained, ‘
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for Feople Who Think — SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1919,
GAINESVILLE, GA., June 14.~The
campalgn started last Monday to raise
$20,000 for a modern dormitory for
Brenau College, is meeting with great
Success, according to the campaign
committee.
Last sesgion many girls were turn
ed away for lack of adequate accom
modations. The citizens of Gaines
ville as well as the trustees realize
this was a blow to the college as well
as the city, and are “putting their
shoulders to the wheel” and respond
ing liberally to the worthy cause.
The new dormitory will accommo
date between 80 and 100 students and
will be one of the finest in the South.
The campaign committee is composed
of the following citizens: John M.,
Hosch, chairman; M. C, Brown, Hayne
Palmour, W. A. Roper, H. N, New
man, W. Henry Smith and Ralph
Hosch. The figures given out Satur
day morning show more than $15,000
subscribed with more territory to be
covered. Dr. J. H. Pearce, president
of the college, who has spent the
greater part of his life in making the
college a success, was a large dona
tor.
D. C, Stow left this morning on a
business trip to Atlanta.
PLAN SCOUT DRIVE.
A mass meeting will be held in the
Chamber of Commerce hall next
Tuesday afternoon at 6 o'clock to
perfect plans for the Boy Scout drive
and select the committees for dif
ferent parts of the city,
B. H. Merck, the scoutmaster, has
obtained the services of Sergeant Dan
Ashford and Henry Smith, both hav
ing seen service in the army.
Rev, E. M. Munroe, pastor of the
First Presbyterian Church; Rev. B.
AV. Mercier, pastor of the Central
Baptist Church, and other prominent
ministers of the city, will assist in
the local drive. Mr. Merck also stat
ed that plans were under way for
weekly hikes to the country and many
other features would be added. More
definite plans will be announced at
the mass meeting Tuesday afternoon
when the big drive actually begins.
ARMY ENLISTMENTS.
Sergeant Frank 8. Wens, of the
local + cruiting office, reports the
following young men enlisted in the
last few days: Carl Cain, Harley
Foster and Frank Buford, for the
motor transport corps at Camp
Jesup; Jesse J. Johnson and Earl
Robinson, Forty-fifth Infantry, Camp
‘Gordon. Sergeant Wens stated he
had other applications pending and
also wanted men for service in France
and the Philippines and many other
parts of the country.
DEAL-SHELDON WEDDING.
The marriage of Miss Jessica Deal
and George Ropes Sheldon, of Salt
Lake City, took place Thursday night
at 8:30 o'clock at the Grace Church
on Bast Washington street. The cere
mony was performed by Bishop J. H.
Mikell, of Atlanta. Just before the
ceremony & beautiful quartet was
rendered by Mrs. B. B. Cheek, Mrs.
Harvey Craige and B. H. Barlier and
H. Merck. Mrs. John Toomes, of
Charlotte, N. C., sister of the bride,
acted as matron of honor. Colonel
Thomas Johnston was best man. B.
B. Cheek and John Blodgett were
ushers. Following the ceremony a
reception was tendered the bride and
bridegroom at the home of the bride
on Park street. After spending a few
days here Mr. ana Mrs. Sheldon will
leave for Salt Lake City to make
their home,
Mrs. J. Lamb Johnston, of Atlanta,
returned home today after spending
some time with her daughter, Mrs.
Robert J. Saunders, on South Main
street.
Miss Agnes Johnston, of Atlanta,
is visiting her sister, Mrs. Robert J
Saunders, on South Main street,
Barber’s Band to Play
At Piedmont Park Today
For the first time in many months
there will be music at Piedmont Park
Sunday afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30
o'clock. Barber's band, directed by
Clint Barber, will give an interest
‘mg program. The Georgia Rallway
and Power Company has agreed to
pay the expenses of the Piedmont
concerts, as the city hasn't the
‘money.
Wedemeyer's band will give its
usual concert at Lakewood from 4
to 6 o'clock. Here is the music you
can hear at either place:
PIEDMONT PARK,
March, “136th Field Artillery,” -
more, |
Overture, “Tancredi,” Rossinl. |
Fox trot, “Alcoholic Blues,” Von
Tilzer,
Fantasia, Fungarian, Tobani.
Concert number, “Rose in No Man's
Land,” Caddigan.
Porto Rican dance, “Rosita,” Mis
sud,
One-step, “My Chocolate Soldier
Sammy Boy,” Alstyne.
Grand selectign, “Macbeth,” Verdi.
Fox-trot, “I'll Say She Does,” Jol
son,
Serenade, “Love's Old Sweet Song,”
Molloy,
Waltz, “Blowing Bubbles,” Kel
lette.
Selection, Irish Melodies, Arr-
Hayes,
" Finale, “Star Spangled Banner.”
AT LAKEWOOD.
March, “Colossus of Columbia,”
Alexander,
Overture, “Zampa,” Herold,
Serenade from ballet “Les Millions
d'Arlequin,” Drigo.
gor:et solo, selected,
nthem, “My Country,” Xoe
arranged Sy \\'edt-mrye::y B e
Selection, “Faust,” Gounod,
(a) One-step, “Johnny's In Town"™
Meyer; (b) jazz trot, “Ja Da,” Carlton.
Waltzes, “Rose Queen,” Braham,
Aria, Cujus Animam, from “Stabat
Mater,” Rossini,
March, “Jersey Carnival” Lieber
feld.
Finale, “The Star Spangled Banner*
Choate Is Credit Men's
: First Viee President
erbert K. Choate, treasurer of t
J. K. Orr SBhoe Company, has b.:‘;
elected first vice president of the
Natfonal Association of Credit Men,
which Is holding its annual conven
tion in Detroit, it was announced yes
terday
My Choate is In Detroit attend
the convention, He has been a ‘(;‘l‘-
rector "! the asgoclation for several
years. The organisation has 25,000
| members,
o &k
e
AW MITCHELL
A campaign against the spread of
malaria fever, to be carried out
ithrough vigorous cfforts looking to the
extermination of mosquitoes, will be
begun in 43 counties of South Geor
gla within the next two weeks by the
Georgin Landowners’ Association, in
co-operation with the State Board of
Health, the Department of Education
and the I"ederation of Women's Clubs.
Final plans were mapped out Sat
urday at a conference between F. H.
Abbctt, secretary of the Landowners’
Assoclation; Drs, T. F, Abercromble
and M, F. Haygood, of the Board of
Health, and other officials of the State
Departments interested.
The decision to put on the cam
paigr. was made following the com
plete success of an anti-mosquito
drive staged in Lowndes County,
which marked the innovation of an
entirely new method of fighting the
germ-carrying pests,
Dr, Marcus Mashburn, the Lowndes
County health officer and an official
of the United States Public Health
Service, got behin' the movement,
following reports rom the South
Georgia Normal School that mnsqui‘}
toes were becoming almost unbear
able. ‘
DYNAMITE USED. |
Instead of using negro labor in dig
ging ditches to drain off the stag
nant pools the county officials m:udfl;
the ditches by using dynamite, Sticks
of the explosive were placed in the
bottom of holes, the same depth as
the ditech desired. Fifteen or twenty
sticks were placed about 15 m.-heu‘
apart, and the fuse and cap attached
to the middle stick, the concussion
setting off the other sticks, The re-|
sult, it is reported, was remarkable. ‘
The ditches were dug .'nnnm:uu-nll.\'l
at about one-fourth the cost of labor
to do the same work. In instances
where ditches were not made, oil was
uged. Dr Haygood reported Saturday
morning that hardly a mosquito can
be found in Lowndes. |
The Georgia landowners' Associa- |
tion entered into an agreement where.
hy motion pictures were taken of l)n‘;
methods used and the results ob
tained. These pictures will be shown
in al' the other counties where thel
work is to be undertaken. f
Dr. T. F, Abercrombie, who is sec
retary of the State Board of Health,
has been given authority to map out
the campaign. Present plans are to
include 43 counties, principally in
Southeast Georgia, where the mala
rid-carrying mosquitoes are worst,
and it is probable the campaign will
be extended to other counties later on,
AREA OF CAMPAIGN.,
The territory to be taken in by the
drive begins at Decatur and Early
Counties on the west, and ox'vnds‘
east, taking all but one or two mun»l
ties, almost as far north as Macon.
The campaign will be conducted by
the State officials as an educational
proposition. A means of exterminat
ing the mosquitoes and preventing the |
spread of malaria will be shown undi
the counties will be lgft to do the
work, with the assistange of the State
Departments wherf required
Professor M. L. Brittain, Superin- |
tendent of Schools, has agreed to use!
his influence and facilities to carry
the educational features in the rural
schools of the territory included.|
Through Mrs. Nellie Peters Black, the
chairman of the Georgla Federation
of Women's Clubs, the co-operation
of that organization was obtained.
Abdominal ~-aporters, Elastic
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the Dr. W. J. McCrary Pellagra Rem- |
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treated in all stages. Treatment taken
in privacy of home,; containg no hab-|
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terms easy; results guaranteed., De
lay is dangerousy investigate now!
Big 50-Page DBook Free!
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This book explaing ali; sent free in
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for copy. Send for your copy today
it may save your life,
Have You These Symptoms?
Tired and Drowsy feelings, accom
panied by headaches; depression or
state of indolence oughness of skin
breaking out or eruptions; hands re®
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lips and throat flaming red: much
mucus and cho g: Indigestion and
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mind affected- and many others.
Write for book now,
Dr. W. J. McCrary, Inc, Dept 106,
Carbon Hill, Ala.
A New Home Method That Any One ('un;
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Loss of Time, l
We b new method that controls|
Asthma, we want you to try it at « .v!
CXPense itter whether your case |8
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whether it wredent as Hay lever or|
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Bor ! il of your method t«
Show Will Be Given
At Souther Field to
Aid Fund for Flyers
Cards are out for a whale of a
circus at Souther Kield, Americus,
where the airmen train for their
brililant stunts and for the steady
flying that ig to form a more and
more important part in both mili
tary and civil life,
The circus is to be held Satur
day, July 12, It is purposed ‘to
make [t the biggest and best circus
ever put on in the State, and part
ly aver it. 'The show ground will
be Souther Field itself, and as
many per:ons will be accommodat
ed as can find standing room in that
ample space. A nominal *charge
will be made, to go into a fund for
athletic and recreational equipment
for the enlisted men at the fleld,
The show will include a baseball
game, vaudeville acts, athletie
feats, and—of course—air stunts by
some of the most accomplished fly
ers in the world. This part of the
exhibition will have a manifest ad
vantage over the usual type of cir
cug, in that everybody can see
everything all the time. It takes a
perfectly inhuman freak to get be
tween you and the sky without ac
tually sitting on your head, which,
of course, will not be permitted at
Souther Field.
Handbills advertising the circus
will be dropped from airplanes on
all Georgia towns it is possible to
Gets-It” Peels
Any Corn or Callus Comes Off Peace.
fully, Painlessly. Never Falls,
It's almost a picnjc to get rid of a
corn or callus the *“(®ets-It"”" way. You
spend 2 or 3 secßnds putting on 2 or 3
drops of “Gets-It,” about as simple as
: A
..\\\\\' A
- A
\.‘ o
I
\ o TS ut
S
b, ,:?-“"
X
'‘B T &
Use “Gets-I1t,” peel off corn this way.
putting on your hat “Gets-1t" does
away forever with ‘*‘contraptions,”
“wrappy’’ plasters, greasy ointments
that rub off, blood-letting Kknive ant
scissors that snip into the ‘‘quick.”
“Gets-It" eases pain Your *jumpy’
corn shrinks, dies, loesens from the toe
You peel the corn painlessly from your
toe In one complete niece That's
where the picni¢ comes in-—you peel it
off as you would a banana peel Noth
ing else but *“Gets-It"” can do it Get
peaceful, common-sense ‘“‘Gets-It."”
“‘Gets-It,”” the pguaranteed, money
back corn-remover, the only sure way
costs but a trifle at any drug store
M'f'd by E. Lawrence & Co.. Chicago
Nl —Advertisement ‘
——
The business of living, when boiled down to its clearest essence and
all the froth skimmed off, is just a matter of thinking.
Fach of us is continually thinking ideas of our own and swapping
them for the ideas of others, If there is a famine of outside ideas
we shrivel up ourselves. Children with “nobody to play with” are
unhappy and unmanageable.
From thinking with our heads to doing with onrgiands is but a lit
tle step and then our thoughts become thing
1t is beeause men of America are so unfettered in their thinking
and doing that this country is such a fine place to live in. It is also
because these thoughts are freely radiated and spread broadeast, in
the distribution of manufactured things and in the distribution of
the facts about them (advertising), that this country is such a fine
place to live in.
The originator of an idea is not much better off than before he ovig
inated it till he gets some one else to absorb it and enjoy it and hene
fit by it, .
The man or woman surrounded by better thoughts and things but
who pays not the slightest attention to them is not mueh better off
than the one with “nobody to play with.”
The advertisements in the papers are thoughts — telling you
about the ideas that other men and women have thought out for
vour happiness. Read the ads. They are the voices from hundreds
of thousands of looms, shops, foundries, studios, laboratories,
where millions of minds are turning pleasant thoughts into worth
while things for your comfort.
The Atlanta Georgi Sunday American
e Atlanta Georglananddunday American
Clean, W holesome Newspapers for Southern Homes
reach in that way, and additional
details wiil appear in the publie
prints as the fertile minds of the
promoters and the good right arm
of the publicity agent turn out
new matter to lure the prospective
vigitor from' his lair into’ the realm
of hangars and planes and dash
and daring.
Metcalf To Be Host
.
At St. Simons Barbecue
J. A, Metcalf, of the famous Honey
Pee Plantation, on St. Simons 18land,
is at home after serving in France
with the Y. M. C. A, and Atlanta
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‘ =) : Men like the convenient “brcak"d)lu , which just fits ,
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Tl THITANDS[E WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA o !cj>‘ ;
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NS S s oz 70 etz 2 G T EX \'fl';’!/,g}/,,,. - _..4.5\%\: y
friends Saturday received invitations
to join him in celebrating the event
by a big barbecue at St. Simons July
4. He sald there would be eloquent
orators and fat crabs and other sea
food and perhaps something to wash,
things down with, and all that kind
of thing. ~
St. Elmo Massengale, who Is spend
ing the summer in his cottage on St.
Simons Island, will be master of cere
monies, and the ladies of the island
colony, led by Mrs, Anna Dodge and
Mrs, Taylor, will have general charge.
Don MeCaskell has been appointed
grand marshal, and Tom Life, the fa
mous caterer, will prepare the bar
becue. And it i 8 anncunced that
!w\'nr‘yhmly without limit-—is invited.
| Mr. Metcalf formerly lived in Colums«
i bus, Ohlo, but he made extensive in
| vestments on St. Simons some years
| ago,
' Beautitul Kodak Finishing by Cone
| Mighest guality. Expertenced operators.
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vite for price list and sample print
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l ““Largest Photographic Laberatory io the Southu*
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