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UTILE ITEMS Of GEORGIA CITIES
Taliapossa.—R. S. Bonner, who re¬
sides at Heflin, produced and canned
last year 1,350 cans of tomatoes.
These cans are now being marketed,
for which Mr. Bonner expects to re¬
ceive $1,350. The work was done
entirely by Mr. Bonner and his fam¬
ily.
Thomasville.—The Truckers’ asso¬
ciation, of Thomas county, was re¬
cently organized in this county, the
organization having been effected at
a meeting of truck farmers, who, by
this co-operative method, purpose to
bring their products to a packing
house, have them packed for ship¬
ping in a proper way, and marketed
to the greatest advantage.
Griffin.—A covered wagon with two
Socialists as passengers attracted con¬
siderable attention, when it stopped in
front of a bank here. On the canvas
sides were painted "For Socialism.
- Socialism Caravan from Coast to
Coast. 2,000,000 Votes for Socialism
in 1916.” The men left New York
City, May 18, 1913. Their destination
is San Francisco, they planning to
reach that city about January 1, 1915.
Cedartown.—An effort is being
made to establish at Cedartown a
15,000 spindle mill, C. W. Bateson
of New York, who has the matter in
charge, proposes to transform the
Josephine and Wahneta knitting
mills into a factory. A number of
local stock subscriptions were recent¬
ly obtained for this purpose. It, is
expected that the bulk of the money
will come from New York.
Lyerly.—Not in many years has
such a prolonged drouth occurred in
January as compared with the pres¬
ent one. Not a drop of rain has fal¬
len since the second of the present
month, and the weather is still fair
and moderately warm. Many of the
wells and cisterns are drying up and
the water supply is getting low. liv¬
en the small creeks and branches
have stopped running and are as dry
as in the hot summer time.
Tallulah Park.—Tallulah Park, Hab¬
ersham county, Georgia, the station
on the Tallulah Falls railroad estab¬
lished for the use of the Appalachian
apple orchards, has now been made
a postoffice, and Ruble K. Stockton
has been appointed postmaster. Mr.
Stockton states that his office will
be ready to open In the next few
days. This postofflce was establish¬
ed at the solicitation of Louis B. Ma
gid and his employees and lias about
150 patrons.
Gainesville.—The average price at
which Hall county land is returned
per acre is $8.51, according to some
recent figures made by the Hall coun¬
ty tax assessors, This step, taken
by the assessors, is in line with the
agitation for the equalization of the
tax rate, and affords an interesting
as well as necessary basis for further
action. The average return per acre
for the Gainesville district, being the
highest was found to be $1.08, The
next highest average return from the
twenty-one districts of the county is
that made by the Oakwood district,
which is $11.11. Polksville comes
lowest with an average of $3.38 per
acre.
Rome.—Citizens of Menlo, in Chat¬
tooga county, are planning to secure
the extension of the Rome and North¬
ern railroad to their city. A project
is already under way to extend the
road to Subligna. The people of
Menlo will ask that another exten¬
sion be built for 14 1-2 miles across
the county from Gore, the present
northern terminus of the railroad, to
Menlo, which is a thriving little town
of 1,200 people, has but one railroad,
the Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia.
If this connecting link is built be¬
tween the Rome and Northern and
the T., A. G. line, it will mean a new
rail route from Chattanooga to Rome,
and Cordele.—The perhaps eventually to Atlanta. j
good housewives of | |
Cordele have started a movement for
a gas plant by taking the matter up
with the chamber of commerce and
insisting that the mayor and city
council lend their assistance to' the
movement. Summer weather is most
too hot, declare the women, for the
use of the common stove or range
for which wood or coal is used as
fuel, and they insist on having gas
for cooking purposes. The move- j
ment has already taken on good j j
form, a committee having been ap
pointed from the chamber of com- |
merce and the city council to further |
it, and it is understood that the city j
fathers are prepared to consider a j
good gas franchise. j
Lexington.—W. P. Willoughby, a
farm overseerer, living four miles !
from this place, who is partially par- ;
alyzed, was attacked by a mad dog I
in the yard of his home and severely
bitten. In some way, while attempt- j
ing to defend himself as best he i
could, ground Mr. Willoughby while was thrown to i j
the and prostrate and
helpless, on account of not having j
the complete use of his limbs, his j
arms were being chewed by the dog
when assistance arrived. So badly j
was he bitten that doctors spent the
night at his home administering
treatment, j
WOMAN IN
BAD CO NDITION
Restored To Health by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegeta¬
ble Compound.
Montpelier, Vt. —- “We have great
faith in your remedies. I tvas very ir¬
regular and was
tired and sleepy all
the time, would have
cold chills, and my
hands and feet would
bloat. My stomach
bothered me, I had
|| ’ pain bad in headache my side and
*a most
of the time. Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vege¬
table Compound hat
done me lots of good
and I now feel fine. I am regular, my
stomach is better and my pains have all
left me. You can use my name if you
like. I am proud of what your reme¬
dies have done for me.” —Mrs. Mary
Gauthier, 21 Ridge St, Montpelier, Vt
An Honest Dependable Medicine
It must be admitted by every fair
minded, intelligent person, that a medi¬
cine could not live and grow in popularity
for nearly forty years, and to-day hold
a record for thousands upon thousands
of actual cures, as has Lydia E. Pink¬
ham’s Vegetable Compound, without
possessing great virtue and actual
worth. Such medicines must be looked
upon and termed both standard and
dependable by every thinking person.
If you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia 13. Pinkham’s Vegeta¬
ble Compound will help you,write
to LydiaK.PinkhamMedicineCo.
(confidential) Lynn, Mass.,for ad¬
vice. Your letter will he opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
Finger Prints Identify.
Taking of the linger print system
for the Identification of criminals, a
Scotland Yard detective remarked the
other day that, although no system Is
infallible, the police, given a finger
print of a man who has been through
their hands, will tel! you who he is in
nine hundred and ninety-nine cases
out of a thousand. Furthermore, it
is a matter of indifference to the Eng¬
lish police by which finger or thumb
the print is made; it can be easily
traced. It was pointed out that in
France the police depend to a great
extent on physical measurement for
identification, but while measure¬
ments are always taken by Scotland
Yard, they are only regarded as of
secondary importance.
FRUIT LAXATIVE
FOR SICK CIO
“California Syrup of Figs” can’t
harm tender stomach,
liver and bowels.
Every mother realizes, after giving
her children “California Syrup of
Figs” that this is their ideal laxative,
because they love its pleasant taste
and it thoroughly cleanses the tender
little stomach, liver and bowels with¬
out griping.
When cross, Irritable, feverish or
breath Is bad, stomach sour, look at
the tongue, mother! If coated, give a
teaspoonful of this harmless “fruit
laxative,” and in a few hours all the
foul, constipated waste, sour bile and
undigested food passes out of the bow¬
els, and you have a well, playful child
again. When its little system is full
of cold, throat sore, has stomach ache,
diarrhoea, indigestion, colic—remem¬
ber, a good “inside cleaning” should
always be the first treatment given.
Millions of mothers keep “California
Syrup of Figs” handy; they know a
teaspoonful today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 50
cent bottle of “California Syrup of
Figs,” which has directions for babies,
children of all ageB and grown-ups
printed on the bottle. Adv.
Muscid Philosophy.
First Fly—There will always be
swatters.
Second Fly—Yes, there can never
be a foolproof fly.
Wright’s Indian Vegetable Pills put
the stomach in good condition in a
short time. Try them for Sick Stom¬
ach, Biliousness and Indigestion. Adv.
It’s all right to have plenty of go,
but staying qualities should not be
overlooked.
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart
If Yours Is fluttering or weak, use RENOVINE.” Made by Van Vleet-Mansfleld Drug Co., Memphis, Tenn. Price $1.00
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND, GEORGIA,
DEPENDED ON HIS FRIENDS
Good Business Argument in Opposi¬
tion to a Request for Reduc¬
tion of Price.
A man seeking to purchase a new
hat visited a haberdashery shop the
other day with the proprietor of which
he was on very intimate terms. After
trying on several of the latest fashions
he casually inquired the price of the
hat. He was informed that it was
sold at $3.
"Isn’t that rather steep?" remarked
the customer. "Isn’t it possible for
you to make a reduction for me? I
have been dealing with you for the
past ten years, and it seems to me
tbat the price is a trifle high.”
“It is impossible for me to lower my
price,” curtly replied the proprietor.
"Non', my dear man,” the other
again asked, “can’t you make some
concessions for an old friend?”
“Because of our friendship you want
me to make a reduction,” said the
owner, dismissing the subject. “Don’t
you know that I depend upon the sup¬
port of my friends, because my ene¬
mies don’t patronize me?”
TRIBUTE TO THE HUMBLE HEN
According to Wise Observation Biddy
Has a Shade the Best of Any
Other Creature.
"Alexander is a character in his
way and is always surprising my
household with his original opinions
and homely philosophy,” says Senator
James E. Martlne. “Not long ago ho
was hoeing and hilling some potatoes
down on our Jersey farm, and I stood
by while he was trying to drive the
chickens away from the freshly turned
earth. They kept him very busy and
finally, instead of losing patience, he
turned to me and said;
“Boss, do yo’ know dat a chicken am
ro most accomodatinist thing what
lives?’’
“How is that, Alexander?” I asked
him.
“Why, it’s like dis, boss. Yo’ eats
’em befo’ dey’s bawn and yo’ eats ’em
aftah dey’s daid.”—Illustrated Sunday
Magazine.
STOP EATING MEAT IF
KIDNEYS OR BACK HURT
Take a Glass of Salts to Clean Kid¬
neys If Bladder Bothers You—
Meat Forms Uric Acid.
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble in some form
or other, says a well-known authority,
because the uric acid in meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked;
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
sorts of distress, particularly backache
and misery In the kidney region; rheu¬
matic twinges, severe headaches, acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and urinary ir¬
ritation.
The moment your back hurts or kid¬
neys aren’t acting right, or if bladder
bothers you, get about four ounces of
Jad Salts from any good pharmacy;
] take a tablespoonfui in a glass of
water before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from the
i acid of grapes and lemon juice, com¬
bined with lithfa, and has been used
j for generations to flush clogged kid
; neys and stimulate them to normal
i activity; also to neutralize the acids in
the urine so it no longer irritates, thus
ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts cannot injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent lithia
water drink which millions of men and
women take now and then to keep the
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus
avoiding serious kidney disease.—Adv.
She Was Nearer the Truth.
“1 love you for ali I’m worth,” pro¬
tested the count,
“I rather think It’s for all I'm
worth,” replied the heiress.
Unfortunate Man.
"I once had a comfortable home,
ma’am.”
“Poor man: how did you lose it?”
“My wife lost her job, ma'arn.”
One Exception.
“After all, talk is cheap.’’
“Not when we have to pay congress
for doing it for us.”
COLDS & LaGRIPPE
5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case
of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe;
it acts on the liver better than Calo¬
mel and does not gripe or sicken.
Price 25c.—Adv.
Accounted For.
“There is a lot of spirit in that
song.”
“That Is why it keeps haunting
1 you.”
Much the
for This Climate!
The French Market Roast and Blend Make It
Essentially a Southern Coffee
Great Travelers and Explorers
agree that the food and drink peculiar
lo ihe country where it is used should
always be adopted in that country.
French Market Coffee is the coffee
of the coffee - producing countries,
where climate most nearly corresponds
to that of our Southern States.
It is therefore, much better suited
for Southern consumption as regards
food value, etc., than coffees roasted
for other climates.
This accounts for the marvelous
success of French Market Coffee;
and why it is called the National
Drink of the South.
Formerly it could only be had at
the old French Market, where the
WHY NOT BUY THE
BEST MACHINERY ?
WOODRUFF’S SAW MILLS
and SHINGLE MILLS are the beist
'lumber makers.
FARQUBAR ENGINES are the best
FAKQL'IIAR CORNISH BOILERS pullers. *65.
arc. the best steamers, SAW MILL
rv FARQUBAR THRESHERS are the best grain
separators. REEVES GASOLINE ENGINES simple and
are
most reliable.
We manufacture WOODRUFF machinery, and are
southern gasoline engines. Jobbers for We Farqubar machinery opportunity and Reeves figure
want an lo
with you. Write for catalogue and get, prices and
_ save money by buying direct from manufacturers, _
8WMLX MILL WOODRUFF MACHINERY NFS. CO., Branch office, Atlanta, G»..WI«ter. 6a. BKtVKs UiSULiSK MOISK
At a Five o'Clock Tea.
“What a scornful expression Kitty’s
poodle has.”
“Yes; one might call it pooh pooh
dle.”
SAGE TEA DARKENS GRAY
HAIR TO ANY SHADE. TRY ITI
Keep Your Locks Youthful, Dark,
Glossy and Thick With Common
Garden Sage and Sulphur.
When you darken your hair with
Sago Tea and Sulphur, no one can
tell, because it’s done so naturally, so
evenly. Preparing this mixture,
though, at home is mussy and trouble
i some. For 50 cents you can buy at
i any drug store the ready-to-use tonic
I called “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur
! Hair Remedy.” You just dampen a
; sponge or soft brush with it and
i draw this through your hair, taking
I one small strand at a time. By morn
Ing all gray hair disappears, and, after
another application or two, your hair
! becomes beautifully darkened, glossy
! and luxuriant. You will also dis
; cover dandruff is gone and hair has
1 stopped falling.
j Gray, faded hair, though no dis¬
grace, is a sign of old age, and as we
all desire a youthful and attractive ap¬
pearance, get busy at once with Wy¬
eth’s Sage and Sulphur and look years
younger.—Adv.
In for Speeding.
Bix—It’s pretty hard for a man to
find work after he's been in jail.
Dix—Yes, unless lie’s a chauffeur.
Rob MBSTEROLE on Sore Frosted Muscles, Feet — Bruises, Colds of Chilblains, the Chest (it
That Sore, Tight Chest! prevents Pneumonia).
At your druggist’s, in 25c and' 50c
jars, $2 aud a special large hospital size
Try this clean, white, soothing oint¬ for JO.
ment. See how quickly it brings relief. Accept no substitute. If your drug¬
MUSTEROLE does gist cannot supply you,
nil that the old-fash¬ send 25c or 50c to tha
ioned mustard plaster MUSTER OLE Com
used to do in the days pany, Cleveland, Ohio,
of our grandmothers, it and we wiil mail you a
but it does without jar, postage prepaid.
Hie blisler / Prof. J. C. Bun
Doctors and nurses South Lynne, Conn., long.
frankly recommend “Your truly says:
Musterolc, has saved life. good remedy.
MUSTER OLE for Sore Throat, Bron¬ my I was troubled
for years with Asthma, Pleurisy and allied
chitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, troubles. I could gain no relief whatever. I
Neuralgia, Congestion, Pleurisy, used but a small amount of your truly remark¬
able remedy, and today I am a thoroughly well
Rheumatism, Lumbago, Pains and man In consequence. It is a Godsend to poor*
Aches of the Back Joints, Sprains, suffering humanity. Refer to me Ah letter
or gladly answered. ik »
quaint old stalls were crowded with
the most brilliant society of the
South, drawn together to enjoy the
matchless coffee known nowheia
else in America.
Now by the establishment of th*
French Market Mills with the special
machinery necessary, this wonderful
old blend is preserved for their de¬
scendants.
The invention of perfectly-sealed
tins allows shipment all over the
United States without loss of fresh¬
ness and flavor.
Try it once upon your own table
and see if anyone of your family
would be willing to use again the
ordinary kinds of coffee.
French Market Coffee is
Note The National T)rin1(_
of the South
French Market Mills
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd., Proprietors)
NEW ORLEANS
DIRECTIONS-— We recommend that you
make French Market Coffee In your usual
way. If you find it too strong:, reduce
quantity until strength and flavor are satis¬
factory. French Market makes more cups
of good coffee to the pound than other
brands, thereby reducing your coffee bill.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never
fail. Purely vegeta¬
ble — act surely
but gently on
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dis¬
tress-cure
indigestion,'
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
DR0PSTr breath, T c»SKv^4ffi pellet
& short often gives entire
in 15to25 days. Trial treatment sent Free
Dr. THOMAS E. GREEN, Successor to
Dr. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
Wealth Acquired: How? 3M. ,, E rt 5
offer of recognized value. A representative of up¬
right justice character wanted in your community. Write Do your¬ Im¬
self and grasp this Opportunity.
mediately to OOOtUNS SUUHLfc CO., Box STS, Canton, C*.
AGENTS —Here It is. Carry in pockets. Sell»
Uoufo. Otflcc. tvoryplaee. Repeat orders. Sam¬
ple. JewellMdsc.Co., 71i>lidw.v., Bayonne,N.J
Atlanta Directory
VICTR0LAS AND GRAF0N0LAS
Complete stock of Victor and Co*
lumbia Records. I. M. BAMECO.,
64 Peachtree St. Write for catalogs
W. N. U., ATLANTA', NO. 5-1914.