Newspaper Page Text
i- DR. CALDWELL ]
EARNED IN 47
YEARS PRACTICE [
cl an watched the results of
n for 47 years, and believed
♦ter how careful people are of
h, diet and exercise, constipa
>ocur from time to time. Of
■Unce, then, is how to treat
comes. Dr. Caldwell always
,r of getting as close to nature
, hence his remedy for conati
on ns Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
a mild vegetable compound,
harm the system and is not
iug. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant
d youngsters love it.
Caldwell did not approve of
■ tic physics and purges. He did not
Hre they were good for anybody’s
Hem. In a practice of 47 years he
jaw any reason for their use when
■p pepsin" will empty the bowels just
ipTot iet a day go by without a
■ p | movement. Do not sit and hope,
I eo to the nearest druggist and get
■ of the generous bottles of Dr. Cald
-9 f s Svrup Pepsin, or write “Syrup
9 sin, ” Dept. 88, Monticello. Illinois,
I free trial bottle.
Keaiitiful Skin
■-soft, smooth, clear, “pink and
■white”—the matchless complexion of
Kouth. Sulphur purifies,
and refreshes the RohUnd's
■kin. For beautifying the £*[ t p 0
■ace and arms use 2Sc
L—Glenn’s /
sulphur Soap
Bpiontaina 33H% Pare Sulphur, At Druggists.
IjfedGood
■ Most ailrnonto start from poor elimination
■ (constipation or semi-constipation). Intes
■ final poisons sap vitality, undermine health
■ and make life miserable. Tonight try W
B Nature's Remedy—ail-vegetable corrective
■ -not just an ordinary laxative. See how M?
B will aid in restoring your appetite and rid
B you of that heavy, leggy, pepiess feeling.
B vegetable—
At Druggists ■— only 25c
ill All Flies! “SSffi 40
ced anywhere, DAISY FLY KILLER attracts and
Is ail flies. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient anc
3k cheap. Lasts all sea
son. Made metal,
can’t spill or tip over
not so *l or injure
anything. Guaranteed
Insist upon
natev fly killes
from your dealer.
\ROLD SOMERS, Brooklyn N. Y
Id's Pleasant Dream
Sum—"l dreamt last night that your
other was ill.” Louise —“You brute!
heard you laugh in your sleep.”
IIS WAY TO END"
mi TROUBLES
Free Proof!
Nothing else known to medical scl
we acts so quickly and surely—and
et so gently—as Dodson’s Lever
one > to regulate balky liver and
iowpls; to purge the system of the
ioisonous waste which makes, people
leadac-hy, bilious, weak; with coated
on gue, bad breath, no appetite or
Energy. Thousands say they have
tfied everything and never found Its
equal. You can prove its merit for
lourself. Just write Sterling Prod
ucts, Wheeling, W. Va., for a FREE
sample bottle. Do it today.
TASTES good-acts quick
Yes
herde- I'm too young to marry you'
' len you’re too old for me?
barhara —Oh—er I was rather
J N| y.—Montreal Family Herald.
| Those'Who Dance ißj|
II pay the piper—and all
Hi LYX who suffer the misery of \
II dancing in new or tight shoes know iHS
■1 i t. Why not shake Allen’s
m\ your shoes? It takes the friction
HI from the shoes, and makes dancing \B|j
HI or walking a real joy. \H
jl ' 1
|| Foots Ease \
■ill For Free trial package and a Foot** \
■MI Fa se Walking Doll, address I
Allen’s Foot—Ease, L>e Roy, N. Y I
PARKER’S
hair balsam
RemovesDandruff-StopsHairFalling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c. and SI.OO at Druggist*.
Htecox Chein. Wks. Patcbocne, N. Y.
T °N SHAMPOO—IdeaI for nse in
Sirß/'f,*? 71 th I>ar ker’s Hair Balsam Makes the
ttgu # rn. 60 cents by mail or at drag
ll-scos Chemical Works. Patchogue, N. X.
Train Is Saved
by Loyal Indian
Soperton. Wls.-A tale of ,he
striking loyalty of an Indian,
was brought into this small lum
her community recently by a
railway section foreman. Tom
McAllan, the foreman, was
through with his day’s work and
was bound for camp, he related,
when from the platform of the
gasoline car on which he was
riding, he espied the body of a
man prone on the rails.
As the gasoline car drew near
er, Jake VVnubeJay, a Potawat
ann Indian, seventy-five years
old, arose from the track and
motioned frantically toward the
car.
McAiiun found the old Indian
was guarding u broken rail he
accidently had stumbled upon
Waubejay had resorted to an
cient “ear to the ground” tactics
to warn him of the approach of
a train because his eyes were
virtually sightless.
Logging trains operated by the
company that frequently had
given the Indian odd Jobs, plied
the road frequently and McAl
lan said a wreck certainly would
have followed had a train struck
the broken rail.
HELD UP SO OFTEN
HE IS USED TO IT
New Jersey Man Knows Just
What to Do.
Newark. N. J.—“l used to run a
store in New York. I’ve been held up
so much it don’t mean nothing no
more.” So said Arnold Dagman of 402
Myrtle avenue, Irvington, a delicates
sen store proprietor who was robbed
recently by two negroes with revol
vers. They forced him into the hack
room of the store and took $35 from
the cash register.
“Fifteen times I’ve been robbed,”
Dagman told Detective Leonard Se
taro, Jr., who was investigating the,
case.
“I wasn’t even going to report this
one, but I’ve only been in Irvington a
year, and I thought this was a good
chance to get acquainted with you
police fellers.
“Chicago? Oil, you should see New
York what they do there. Why, Chi
cago must be a peaceful village com
pared to New York, if 1 have to judge
by my experiences. Of course, I sup
pose everybody doesn’t meet as many
holdup men as I have, but I certainly
have had luck that w T ay—mostly had.
1 carried holdup insurance in New
York, hut I haven’t any here.
“Why, I know everything they want,
me to do before they even tell me.
All ! have to see is that gun and I
know what comes next. Into the back
room and shut up.
“If you don’t shut up you get a bat
in the eye. So 1 shut up. The cash
register rings out in front, then the
door slams and then everything is
quiet. It’s all over, and you can come
out and figure up in peace how much
vou’ve lost.
“Once I had a big store in the New
York theater district. They held me
up and took S2OO. The papers carried
a story the next day telling of the
$2,000 in the safe that the bandits
overlooked. In a few days they came
hack and made me open up that safe,
too. After that 1 gave up reporting
holdups for a long while.”
Six Dead as Result
of Cave Man Tactics
Athens.—The Turk of today is prov
ing himself the barbarian of the much
older days. One, named Osmanfu liv
ing in a town near the Persian fron
tier, fell in love with a beautiful Turk
ish girl. Consent to marriage with
her was had from the girl and her
parents, hut before they were married
Kamal Pacha banned polygamy and
this man had a wife whom he could
not divorce without a lawful cause,
which he did not possess. As weeks
and months passed the girl’s parents
were obliged to promise her to anoth
er applicant.
Late in the evening of the wedding
when the girl was led into her mate’s
residence Osmanfu. who was still in
passionate love with the girl, called
on five of his wild friends and asked
them to help him to carry her off be
fore her husband had taken possession
of her. Armed with short daggers,
they lounged about the bridegroom’s
door till all the guests had left the
house. They then walked into the
house and the bridgegroom was
stabbed to death. His mother and two
sisters rushed out. shouting for help
i,„t iliev were swiftly silenced with
(hi—er thrusts in their hearts. 1 hen
the bride ran ont and took the dagger
from her first lover’s hand and planted
it in his heart. She then dealt herself
a blow and fell, making the number of
dead, six.
Girl Dragged Into Cage
by Lioness and Killed!
Bragado. Argentina.-Maria Estelle
Perez, daughter of a workman on a
plantation near here, met a tragic
death when she approached ton near
the cage <>t an enraged lioness at the
owner’s private zoo. and was dragged
intn the case and killed.
The girl's father* attracted hv her
screams, fired into the cage, hut was
unable to kill the lioness before the
child had died.
J-HL_ROCKDALE RECORD. Conyers, Ga., Wed., June 12, 1929.
Lack of Passing Faddish Influence
Makes This Home Good for Years
v" -jkyLj* . TJbHH
Hffffir/iHS tsWs /// / &HI
iwssiiiisr S
There is nothing striking or novel about this home, but it should appeal
to many of the more conservative home builders as one which will maintain
Its appearance through many years because of its lack of passing faddish
influence.
By W. A. RADFORD
Mr. William A. Radford will answer
questions and give advice PUKE OF
COST on all subjects pertaining to
practical home building, for the read
ers of this paper. On account of his
wide experience as editor, author and
manufacturer, he is, without doubt, the
highest authority on all these sub
jects. Address all inquiries to William
A. Radford, No. 1827 Prairie avenue,
Chicago, 111., and only inclose two-cent
stamp for reply.
Tlie delightful thing about building
and owning your own home is that
you can add to and improve it year
after year, and every Investment of
money or of time and labor is not
lost, but becomes a real and growing
improvement for years to come.
The new home looks bare and raw
when the carpenters are finally
through; but to the eye of iho owner
this holds an interesting invitation to
set out shrubs and plants, to lay out
I KITCHEN. O
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DINING-tM.V
IS'O'AlllO" I yi\|
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O HALL ■■ * ~ *—
PM / SUN KM U
LIVING-KM. ©’©"a.i3'o" 11
L cs'o-A.a'o- v |
HU , —l—l
P J
First Flcjr Plan.
a garden and establish a lawn, ft
can’t all lie done the first year, he
knows; but a start can be made and
a little can be done each season. And
through imagination the owner can
see the future beauties which some
day will be realized.
And there is hardly any other sat
isfaction in life equal to this of cre-
One Per Cent Monthly
Fair Carrying Charge
The financing of a home means far
more than the mere matter of putting
up a few hundred dollars to cover the
hare equity. Among the things to be
considered are; Saving the money,
buying the land, planning the house,
buying the material and budgeting for
both the investment and the running
expenses.
Building a home, or even buying a
home, ought not to he considered in
a slipshod manner. Few people real
ize that the home for the family
should not be invested in the same
manner as a real estate operator or
speculator buys up property on the
moment or on a shoe string. While
the former is putting Ids hard-earned
cash in a place where lie plans to
house his family for a number of
years, the latter expects a quick turn
over.
Oliver Wendell Holmes has said that
the training of a child should start
“one hundred years before lie is born.”
While we would not carry out this ex
treme -statement in connection with
tlie financing of a home, it is very
necessary to think of and work out
far in advance the home-owning prob
lem. It cannot be done in a hurry,
and tlie greatest amount of delibera
tion should be exercised.
Some of tlie simple ways of getting
at how much one ought to invest in a
home may be worked out somewhat
on the following lines: One should
not invest in a home tlie total value
of which is more than three times
one’s yearly income. Also, one should
not plan to pay out more per month
for carrying charges (which would be
practically the same as rent in an
apartment) than one’s weekly income.
In financing, as in other matters
pertaining to the home, the owner-to
be should seek the advice of an ex
pert, whose character is established
beyond question. Money and worry
will be saved by so doing.
To Give Height
When additional height is desired in
low rooms, wall paper with stripes of
rising lines in the pattern should be
used. The paper should run directly
to tlie ceiling line, and the ceiling
should be papered with a plain color
•lose to the shade of the background
of the walls, if it is not too dark, so
that (he change from wall to ceiling
will not be so marked
ative work—planning and building up
a comfortable, attractive home. It
does not have to be large or expen
sive. We look at the big show places
and admire them., and perhaps here
and there borrow an idea from them;
but it is our own little home place
that really arouses our enthusiasm.
There is nothing striking or novel
about the home building design shown
1 ho If
D J
•ft'O-AD'O" EATHb
■>;;;■ +kMJ.
\ Mg ” r |
Second Floor Plan.
in the accompanying illustration, but
it should appeal to many of the more
conservative home builders as one
which will maintain its appearance
for many years because of its lack of
passing faddish influence. This is a
six-room house, 2S feet by 24 feet.
It is a frame construction with out
side walls covered with ship-lap sid
ing. An attractive feature of this
home is the sun room, 9 feet G inches
by 13 feet with the balcony above.
The living room extends the width
of the house and is 23 feet by 12 feet.
The dining room is 13 feet by 11 feet.
Adjoining the kitchen is a breakfast
nook. The stairs to tlie second floor
run out of the hall which connects
the living room and dining room. Dp
stairs are two bedrooms and bath and
a smaller room which is designated
as a playroom, 9 feet by 8 feet G
inches but which is large enougli for
a small bedroom.
Good Paint, Painter,
Assure Satisfaction
Springtime is house painting time
just tlie same as it is moving time,
June bride time, flower garden time.
In the process of freshening up the
house and making it springlike as the
garden, it is always well to heed the
painter’s piea for a two-coat job.
Tlie painter says, “It is next to im
possible to get the proper kind of a
job with less than two coats, in re
painting. The outside of a house is
bound to become discolored with dirt,
and one coat will not completely hide
such a surface. Moreover, a two-coat
job will last more than twice as long
as a one-coat job and therefore is
more economical.”
It has also been proved time and
again that using only the best paint
pays. No matter what kind of mate
rial is put on, the labor charge for
applying it is the same. Tlie cost of
application represents from two-thirds
to three-quarters of the cost of the
whole job, in tlie majority of cases.
If the job wears, bills for painting will
not come around again for three or
four years. If it doesn’t, the bills will
be frequent. When paint goes wrong,
you have not only lost the paint cost,
bu(; what it cost to put it on.
Avery important factor in a satis
factory paint job is the painter. A
good painter knows how to mix up
his white-lead and oil to suit specific
surface conditions. Strange as it may
seem, two sides of tlie same house
sometimes require quite different
treatment. The skilled painter allows
for this. With everything taken into
consideration, good paint and a good
painter are the best assurance that
this spring’s paint job will look well
next spring.
Colored Tile Useful
Inside House or Out
In considering various features for
the outside of the house, such as
floors, steps, pergolas, seats, gate en
tries, and walks, as well as interior
walls, floors, etc., it is well to con
sider the versatility and durability of
tile. One great factor of beauty is
simplicity, and because tile possesses
brilliancy of coloring it permits a sim
ple and artistic furniture grouping.
For outside as well as inside service
these distinctive tiles, fashioned of
clay and burned by an intense heat to
make them lasting and fireproof, aro
a material unfading and practical.
Good Act Credited to
Old “Dad” Mississippi
The Father of Waters, which lias
figured so much in the news in tlie
past few years as a destructive river
ready to break over levees and flood
thousands of acres of farm land with
tremendous loss in buildings, stock
and equipment, sometimes plays Santa
Claus.
He has just done it to the extent of
providing 525 acres of farm laud in
Louisiana and Mississippi, which lias
been thrown open to homesteaders.
It is not often in this day and gener
ation that Uncle Sam lias any part of
the public domain to give away to ills
pioneer sons and daughters.
Tlie particular land in question
has been gradually developed as tlie
Mississippi has slowly changed Its
course near Glasscock Island. Not
only has It developed, but it lias de- |
veloped into practically level stretches ‘
of rich heavy black loam and sandy
loam. —Washington Star.
Not Guilty
Robert, five years old, came into
the house with tlie seat of his play
overalls torn away. His mother had
forbidden hint to climb trees, fences,
or anything else. #
“Now Robert!” she scolded. “You
have been climbing again! You’ve
torn your pants while climbing!”
“No mamma, I didn’t,” said Robert.
“Robert! You certainly tore these
pants climbing somewhere.”
“Indeed and Indeed I didn’t,
mamma,” pleaded Robert.
“How did you tear them then?”
“I tore ’em coming down!” sobbed
Robert.
“Wo All Sing, You Know”
A story Henry T. Finck, the music
critic, used to tell had to do witli the
teacher of Olive Fremstad. Happen
ing to be near where Fremstad’s par
ents lived, tiie teacher called on them
and spoke of their daughter’s triumph
at the Metropolitan Opera house and
abroad, saying finally:
“You must be proud to have a
daughter who has done so much with
her voice.”
“Well,” said the mother, calmly,
"we ail sing, you know.” —Philadelphia
Public Ledger.
Forestation Gains
Reforestation is gradually coming
into its own, and during the last three
years 1,055,658 acres have been added
to the state and community preserves.
Tlie state of Washington led in the
increase, with Pennsylvania second.
Three states which had not had state
forests prior to 1925 —Delaware, Geor
gia and South Carolina —have fellen
in line. The total of public-owned
forests now is in excess of 12,000,000
acres.
The Freudians
“Our Freudian playwrights crack
up vice and roast virtue,” said Pub
lisher George Haven Putnam of New
York.
“At a Greenwich village reception
an old-style playwright said to a new
style or Freudian actress:
“‘There’s old Boar, tlie critic. Poor
old Boar! He’s as ugly as sin, Isn’t
he?’ *
“ ‘Don’t you mean,’ said tlie actress,
‘as ugly as virtue?’ ”
Bad Practice
“So the lady got life for shooting
her husband? Isn’t that rather se
vere. and unusual?”
“Y’es, hut they had to make an
example of her —it was her fourth
conviction.”
A man’s most bitter enemy is tlie
ex-friend who can no longer work
him.
MOTHER!
Child’s Best Laxative is
“California Fig Syrup"
Hurry Mother! Even a bilious, con
stipated, feverish child loves the
pleasant taste of “California Fig
Syrup” and it never fails to open tlie
bowels. A teaspoonful today may pre
vent a sick child tomorrow.
Ask your druggist for genuine “Cal
ifornia Fig Syrup’’ which has direc
tions for babies and children of all
ages printed on bottle. Mother! You
must say “California” or you may get
an imitation fig syrup.
1 Why suffer with
Skin Troubles fcg)
WHEN Cuticura Ointment, because of its abso- 7_ V. f
lute purity, and antiseptic and healing properties, in \
combination with Cuticura Soap is unsurpassed in \Jm | \\
the treatment of pimples, eczemas, rashes, irritations ~A 1
and all forms of skin troubles. f \ I /
<i , • __ „ Ointment 25c. and 50c. . / / \ //
Soap 25c. Talcum 25c. /ZrA / /
tli.Ll'-'UI Q Sample each free. \
X. V for Address: "Cuticura” / /fy \
J Dept. B 6 NDCN / I // '
PURIT Y Malden, Massachusetts \ \) I I /1/
MakesUfe
Sweeter
Children’s stomachs sour, and need
an anti-acid. Keep their systems
sweet with Phillips. Milk of Magnesia 1
When tongue or breath tells of acid
condition —correct it with a spoonful
of Phillips. Most men and women have
been comforted by this universal
sweetener —more mothers should in
voke its nld for their children. It Is a
pleasant tiling to take, yet neutralizes
more acid than the harsher tilings too
often employed for the purpose. No
household should be without It.
Phillips is the genuine, prescrip
tional product physicians endorse for
general use; the name is important.
“Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S.
registered trade mark of the Charles
11. Phillips Chemical Cos. and its pre
decessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875,
PHILLIPS
r Milk
of Magnesia
For Galled Horses
Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh
Money back for first bottle if not sotted. All dealers.
Satan doesn’t advertise. He gets
plenty of business.
Are we studying life, when we are
merely observing it?
Over 400,000 women and girls who
were weak, ‘blue,” nervous, run
down, and unable to do their work
properly, have improved their
health by taking Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound. By
accurate record, 98 out of every 100
report benefit. You can be almost
certain that it will help you too.
a OILS]
INISH like magic!
boil. specialist’* salve. B
is pain inatanUy, and S
ns anU heals worst boll ■
overnixbL Get Carboilß
■t ana lansb at boils. I
Nashville. Term. I
FOR SALE To Merchants
New and refinished Northey Coolers, Refrig
erators, Freezer and Display Cases, Fish.
Chests, etc. Send for Special list, to South
eastern Sales Cos., 223 Spring St., S. W., At
lanta; Thomas & Schultz Cos., 131 Patton
Ave., Asheville, N. C.,; A. P. Solomon, Sr.,
22G West Bay St., Savannah; Florida Fixture
Cos., 709 East Bay St., Jacksonville; H. P.
Bramlett, 210 Peach Place, Tampa; Berner
Store Equipment Cos., 824-828 N. E. Ist Ave.,
Miami, or write to Northey Mfg\ Cos,, Box 338-1,
Waterloo, lowa. Iligh-class salesmen wanted.
I MOST POPULAR HOTEL NEW YDRkT
SPECIAL FAMILY WEEKLY RATES
LARGE SUNNY ROOM. BATH. SHOWER
jbr 2 PERSONS pm 2l Ptn weoc
HOHifooo BkVstM Lunch 60 Dinner 7%J|
l6rf9onatu. w 4
Health (living -vw
%u ii fill in mi.
AH Winter Long • m^
Marvelous Climate Good Hotels Tourist
Cam pa—Splendid Roads—Gorgeous Mountain
Views. The wonderful desert resort of the West
P Writs Croo A Chaffoy
aim Iprfinsfjk
CALIFORNIA
IHg Ohio Corporation Seeks Manager for Un
occupied Territory. Liberal commission.
Earnings start immediately. Good for SO,OOO
yearly. We furnish stock, deliver and collect.
Previous experience unnecessary. Fyr-Fyter
Cos., 1807 Fyr-Fyter llldg., Dayton, Ohio.
Pyl-Oou for Piles. Ideal preparation for ab
solute relief from bleeding, internal, pro
truding, blind and itching piles. Money Back
Guarantee. $i for full size tube. Franschlll
Drugs, 3303 Newberry Ave., Chicago, 111.
MEN', WOMEN OK ST I DENTS: Money-mak
ing Information; free descriptive folders. It
may mean millions to you. Write
Nicolas Cos.. 417 So. Dearborn, Chicago, 111.
POTATO PLANTS
$1.60 M, 6,000 $1.40 M, 10,000 $1.25 M, To
mato Plants $1; cash with order; prompt
shipping. GA. PLANT FARM, BAXLEY. GA.
S<-nd $1 and I Will Tell You flow to Make
your hat sweat proof; saves me SSO a year.
J. F. OYLER
304 Adelaide .... Detroit, Mich.
Mammoth Bronze Turkey Eggs
45 cents each. $35 per 100, prepaid. Mrs. Lu
cinda Landes, 360 W. Eldorado, Decatur, 111.
CHICKS. Rocks. Reds; 100, $11; Heavy
mixed, sjo. Hatch every Wednesday. Prepaid
live delivery. Hat ilia Farms, Way cross, Ga.
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 24-1929.