Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, August 11, 1916, Image 5
IMITATION IS SINCEREST FLATTERY but like counterfeit money the imita¬ tion has not the worth of the original, insist on “La Creole” Hair Dressing— it’s the original. Darkens your hair in the natural way, but contains no dye. Price $1.00.—Adv. A Subtle System. “Wliat we want to get,” said the editor of the household publication, "is a good series of articles on how to manage a husband.” “For what?” “In order to buy all the fashionable things we're going to advertise a wom¬ an will have to have the hnsband thor¬ oughly trained.” Don’t Poison Baby. WT'ORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must have l"" 1 1 PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produce sleep, and a FEW DROPS TOO MANY will produce the SLEEP FROM WHICH THERE IS NC WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, lauda¬ num prohibited and morphine, each of which is a narootic product of opium. Druggists all, are from selling either of the narcotics named to children at or to anybody without labelling them “poison.” The definition of “narcotic” is : “A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, but which in poison¬ and ous doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions and death." The taste smell of medicines containing opium are disguised, and sold under the names of medicine “ Drops,” “ be Cordials,” “ Soothing SyrupB,” etc. You should physician not permit know any what to is given to your children without NOT you or your of it composed. CASTORIA DOES CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature erf Chas. H. Fletcher. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of' A Feminine Egotist. “I consulted a fortune teller the oth¬ er day,” said the poor but proud young man, “and she told me I was in love with a beautiful heiress, but she would never marry me. It looks like I was up against it!” “Oh. not necessarily,” rejoined the fair maid on the other end of the sofa. “No fortune teller has ever been authorized to speak for me.” SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE and constant use will burn out the scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo¬ ing with "La Creole” Hair Dressing, and darken, in the natural way, those ngly, grizzly hairs. Price. $1.00.—Adv. Ribbon "White Elephant.” Three yards of silk ribbon are the latest contribution to the conscience fund. And thereby a great problem as to how to cover the value into the United States treasury has arisen. Tlie contribution seems something of a White elephant,^the Washington Star says. Probably the ribbon will be sold to the highest bidder at public auction and the amount realized covered into the treasury. The value of the ribbon cannot be judged and the prospective amount of the credit to the conscience fund cannot be established. The rib¬ bon is about four inches wide, vari¬ colored and of exquisite heavy qual¬ ity. The envelope containing the ribbon was postmarked Paterson, N. .1. There was no message inclosed, the package being addressed simply to “The Con¬ science Fund, Washington, D. C.” It is presumed that the ribbon itself wps smuggled in and is now surrendered. Tetterlns Conquers Poison Oak. I enclose 50 cents in stamps for a box of Tetterlne. I have poison oak on me again, and that is all that has ever cured It. Please hurry it on to M. E. Hamlett. Tetterlne Montalba, Tex., May 21, ’08. Worm, cures Ecxema, Tetter, Ring Itching Piles, Old Itching Sores, Scalp Dandruff, Chilblains and every form of and Skin Disease. Tetterlne 50c; Tetterlne Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mall from the manufacturer. The Shup trlne Co., Savannah, G&. With every mall order for Tetterlne ws give a box of Shuptrine’s 10c Liver Pills free. Adv. Dandelions Will Be Popular. Dandelions will yet become popular ms an article of diet with the people. They have always been so abundant that they have not been appreciated. Now some eastern canning establish¬ ments are advertising for dandelions to can. They are about to be put on the market, as a staple article of food, to be had at any time of the year. If they are so good for factories to can, they are also good for the home gar¬ dener to can. Our schools are now teaching the science of canning, which will be a help in making the dande¬ lion green available. One of the great advantages in favor of this vegetable is that it is extremely hardy. It grows as far north as the shores of the Arc¬ tic ocean. Some of the seed houses carry dandelion seeds. Anyone, how¬ ever, can gather his own seed, and it should prove interesting to experiment along the line of raising dandelions from native seed on very rich ground and under garden conditions. Had Severe Kidney Trouble Engineer J. E. Fellows of the C. N. 0. & T. P. Ry, of Chattanooga, Term., writes that when he was firing he was attacked with kidney trouble. He took various medicines and tried doctors, but neither did him any good. A friend advised him to try Dr. Thacher’s Liver and Blood Syrup He did so, and improved from the first. He has never been troubled since, and what it did for him it will do for you. It is the safest and surest treat¬ ment for indigestion, kidney and liver trouble. 50c and $1. at all druggists. Sold lor 47 years. F"or Malaria, Chills and Fever. Also a Fine General Strengthening Tonic. 50c ui $1.00 «t ill Dm Stsrs THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA. Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove’s The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless i chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen¬ eral Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. No Objection. Wife—“Do you object to my having two hundred dollars a month spending money?" Husband—“Certainly not, if you find it anywhere.”—Judge. One can become a near-nuisance by continually criticizing the weather. LIFE ETERNAL REV. ROBT. M. RUSSELL, D. D., Teacher of Bible Doctrine and Homiletics, Moody Bible Institute, Chicago TEXT—And this Is life eternal that they should know thee the only true God, and him whom thou didst send, even Jesus Christ.—I John 17:3, Life eternal is a condition of exis¬ tence involving both quality and quan¬ lil BWr Ik fak am Life Is Knowledge. Life has been defined as the func¬ tioning of an organism with its envir¬ onment. Ail life therefore is a form of knowledge, and Is high or low, broad or narrow, in accordance with the environment that is apprehended. The worm has a low order of life be¬ cause its environment is simply the soil. The worm knows nothing but mud, and that by the one sense of touch. Bird life is higher than worm life. The bird knows the earth and the air, the sky and the clouds, and has delight In the fellowship and song of its mates. Man’s life is the highest of earthly creatures, because his range of knowledge Is the widest. He knows more about the earth than the worm, and more about air and cloud and sky than can the bird. He apprehends the conditions of his own country and age, and then sweeps in thought the con¬ ditions of other lands and times. He multiplies his sciences until these em¬ brace the multiplied facts of earth and air and sky. He forms his philoso¬ phies dealing with the mystery of ex¬ istence. Man’s life is thus the highest of the earthly creation because the widest In knowledge. Eternal Life. The widest circle of human knowl¬ edge has to do with God. Science ex¬ ults in the scope of her domain when she turns the pages of the rocks to read the story of earth, or sweeps the heavens with the telescope, to mark out the pathway of the stars, but there is truth deeper than that written on the foundations of the earth, and high¬ er than that written upon the scroll of heaven with burning stars. There is a sun behind the sun. God is the widest circle of truth. In the realm of the physlcol the du¬ ration of life depends upon maintain¬ ing correspondence between the or¬ ganism nnd its environment. If either fails the issue is death. The life of the fish continues while Its Inner vl tallty has the supporting influence of the flowing stream. Let inner vital¬ ity be Impaired, or let the stream run dry, death must follow. In like man¬ ner man has a political life when his soul Interests are awake to political surroundings, and when these sur¬ roundings minister to a continued in¬ terest. Let there be a change toward indifference in the soul of the man, or some separation from political sur¬ roundings, and there Is an end of what we term political life. Man’s spiritual life has in It the element of the eternal because his fellowship Is with the eternal God. Through regen¬ eration the soul of man is made alive by the life of God. In Christian liv¬ ing the soul,of man abides In cohtact with the living God. The conditions of an endless existence are therefore fur¬ nished. The redeemed soul has in it the life of God and has for its envir¬ onment God himself the eternal one. The conditions for both a happy and an endless experience are therefore furnished through the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Knowledge That Is Life. The knowledge of God which con¬ stitutes eternal life Is a personal knowledge. God may be known me¬ chanically through his works just as men may be known through the build¬ ings they have erected. Men may be known biographically in the story of their accomplishments; but this is not the same ns a personal acquaintance. To know Abrafiam Lincoln as the au¬ thor of the Emancipation Proclama¬ tion is a way of knowing him, but he was known in a better and personal way by soldiers who received his par¬ don when through excessive weariness they fell asleep on sentry duty. To know God is to rejoice in his father¬ hood and to feel the thrill of sonship through faith in Jesus Christ. Immor¬ tality Involves an endless blessedness in the knowledge of God. Human pa¬ rents are powerless to prolong the lives of their children. The eternal God is Lord of life. The risen Christ will never withdraw his supporting life from the redeemed soul. “He that hath the son hath the life; he that hath not the son of God hath not the life,” no matter what else he may have in world knowledge or culture. Cannot Live for Self Alone. So mysteriously are we linked with others in this world of mystery that we cannot fail in our duty without baricing others, nor bear ourselves: bravely that others are not benefited More Efficacious. “In a few days, Mr. Grimm, you will have no further trouble with my chick¬ ens,” said Neighbor Yaw. “I am work¬ ing on an invention which is calculated to discourage them from scratching. It Is an attachment which fastens to the fowl's leg and has a prod project¬ ing out behind. When he or she, as the case may he, attempts to scratch, the prod strikes the ground ami kicks him or her forward. A few scratches, and he or she kicks himself or herself dear out of the garden," “I do not expect to wait for your chickens to kick themselves out of my garden,” replied Gaunt N. Grimm. “The next time I catch them in there I’ll grab you by the neck, and kick you all over this end of town.” READ THIS FROM A PROMINENT RAILROAD MAN Mr. John W. Hager, Fuel Inspeetor ol the N. C. & St. L. Ry., living at 3008 Carlisle, Nashville, Tenn., the writes; “During the fall of 1914 1 had grippe for six weeks and had three doctors. One bottle of Lung-Vita did me more good than all of the medicine they had given me. Last winter my little boy had the whooping cough and we thought he would never be well again. We tried everything we could think of, with no results, until we used Lung-Vita. well and hardy After and using this medicine been both¬ he is has never ered any more. We would not be with¬ out it in our home.” Use Lung-Vita colds, for consumption, asthma, coughs, croup, and whooping cough, if {or your dealer thirty-day does not have it send $1.75 a treatment today. Nashville Medicine Co., Dept. C, Nashville, Tenn. Adv. Ordering Meala by Telephone. A cafe in Plainfield, N. J., has in¬ stalled a unique system for the con¬ venience of its diners. Whether the plan will eventually be welcomed by the dining public has still to be proved, but it has the merits of ingenuity and novelty. Each table In this enterpris¬ ing cafe is connected directly with the kitchen and the head chef by means of a telephone. The fastidious diner, in¬ stead of trusting the fine points of ills order to a mere waiter, tells them di¬ rectly into the ear of the chef. Thus he can have his steak cooked to the exact turn he likes and get exactly the proper number of drops of season¬ ing in the suuees. An Enlister. "I thought you told me you were on your way to enlist?” “I am,” replied Plodding Pete. “I’m tryin’ to enlist sympathy for me large an’ unsatisfied appetite." COVETED BY ALL but possessed by few—a beautiful head of hair. If yours is streaked with gray, or is harBh and stiff, you can re¬ store it to its former beauty and lus¬ ter by UBlng “La Creole” Hair Dress¬ ing. Price $1.00.—Adv. Costly. “I hope you’ll make a good job of this portrait,” remarked the multimil¬ lionaire. “Remember, it’s costing me in the neighborhood of ten thousand dollars.” “I beg pardon," said the artist. “My price is only a thousand dollars.” “Yes, yes, I know that. P>ut think of all the valuable time I have to spend posing for you.” STATE ITEMS CONDENSED Atlanta.—T. A. Brown, 62 years old, committed suicide by jumping out of a window on the thirteenth floor of the Fourth National bank building. The body was fearfully mangled. Atlanta.—Herman Stewart Cobh, aged 14, son of Mrs. Beulah Cobb, of East Point, died at a private hospital, death coming as a result of a kick in the chest received from a mule he was in the act of hitching up. Lithonia.—Ed and Cliff Abbott, bro¬ thers, aged 22 and 20 years, respect¬ ively, were struck by lightning and instantly killed, while the kitchen of their home, about three miles from here, during a heavy thunderstorm. Woodland.—Boll weevils were found in the western part of the county by C. E. Garrett, who reports that much damage is being done to his cotton, which is shedding a large number of squares and small bolls. A few of the larvae were sent to the state ento¬ mologist for examination. Atlanta.—An ordinance to prohibit the sale of newspapers, extras or oth¬ ers, on the streets >of the city after six o’clock in the evening, was intro¬ duced in council and referred to the ordinance committee. Objection is to extras sometimes sold late at night by newsboys. Jackson/—From the standpoint of interest and attendance, the twenty sixth annual session of the Indian Springs Holiness camp meeting, which is being held here, promises to be the most successful yet held. The meetings will continue for ten days, closing Sunday night, August 20. Macon.—Sergeant Grady Hamilton, member of the supply company of the Second regiment, and Sergeant Eu¬ gene Harris, regimental bugler of the same regiment, were badly hurt when an automobile driven by Sergeant. Hamilton plunged over a 15-foot em¬ bankment near the camp grounds. Marietta.—Three persons are, dead, another is believed to be fatally in¬ jured and two more are painfully bruised as the result; of an automobile accident which occurred on the At¬ lanta road about a mile from here when a big six-cylinder car, owned by C. J. Estes of Powder Springs and driven by himself, ran into a ditch and turned turtle while speeding at the rate of 50 miles an hour. Griffin.—As the result of one of the worst storms in the history of this section, the Southern railway bridge across the Towaliga river, eight miles from Griffin, was completely destroy¬ ed. The Central of Georgia railway bridge acros sa small creek between Griffin and Vaughn was almost wash¬ ed away. The dam at Rushton cotton mills lake was broken by the heavy rains. Brunswick.—Within the next few weeks eight thousand tons of cotton seed meal will pass through the port of Brunswick, This big supply, it is stated, is to be shipped to Great Brit¬ ain, through a local company, and the first of the shipment will begin to ar-, rive shortly. This is an entirely new business for the port, and is said to be the first of a number of big ship¬ ments to be made from here. Athens.—The famous Jim Smith es¬ tate case has taken another turn. An¬ other state superior court judge has taken jurisdiction and another injunc¬ tion fight is on. Judge J. B. Jones of the northeastern circuit has granted a temporary injunction against the or¬ dinary of Oglethorpe county, restrain¬ ing him from appointing permanent administrators of the estate, the hear¬ ing to be returnalile to the court at Gainesville on the 26th of August. Norcross.—Funeral services of Mrs Margaret McElroy were held at Cham blee. Mrs. McElroy, known through out Georgia, as “Granny” McElroy died at Clarkston at. the age of 101 At NorcrosB for years past her anni versary has been celebrated with a big dinner attended by friends and rel¬ atives from nearly every part of the state, including her fifteen grandchil¬ dren, twenty-five great-grandchildren and several great-great-grandchildren. Savannah.—In the superior court Judge W. W. Sheppard issued an or¬ der directing the Central of Georgia railway to transport to Savannah from Tybee sixty barrels of beer captured in a raid. The legal department of the Central railway states the beer will be transported under “judicial com¬ pulsion.” Recently in Girard, Ala., the authorities endeavored to force the Central to haul liquor through the means of a mandamus, but failed. Hinesviile.—A big hog ran quickly into the home of G. B. Bowen, near here, and seizing an infant child, ran with it to a near-by branch. The mother followed, and with the assist¬ ance of an old colored man beat the hog off. No damage was done to the child beyond a few bruises, but a minute more and it would probably have been crushed in the great jaws of the brute. There is now one less member of the hog population in this community. Louisville.—Plans were completed by the board of county commissioners in session here to install dipping vats. Sufficient amount was appropriated to meet all expenses, and the county divided into districts to carry out the work in detail. Albany.—Morris D. Gortatowsky, 76 years old, and for half a century a citizen of Albany, died at his resi¬ dence after a short illness. He was born in Prussia, but came to this coun¬ try at the age of 17, and served in the Confederate army as a member of the Thirty-second Georgia regi¬ ment. tity. The quality is really the su¬ preme feature, for endlessness to be a blessing must mean the perpet¬ uation of that which is desir¬ able. No one would desire an endless existence that involved ei¬ ther pain or dis¬ comfort. Quality, therefore, has the first emphasis in <!ea,in K with the matter of eternal life. UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK! CLEAN LIR JDJOWELS MY WAY Just Once! Try “Dodson’s Liver Tone” When Bilipus, Consti¬ pated, Headachy—Don’t Lose a Day’s Work. Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel fine and cheerful; make your work a pleasure; be vigorous and full of am¬ bition. But take no nasty, danger¬ ous calomel, because It makes you sick and you may lose a day’s work. Calomel ts mercury or quicksilver, which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel crashes Into sour bile like dynamite, breaking It up. That’s when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. Listen to me! If you want to enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone. “Your druggist or dealer sells you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone under my personal money How to Etch Glass. A simple way to etch glass is to warm it carefully; if heated too rapid¬ ly it will crack. Rub paraffin or bees¬ wax over the warm surface of the glass, and then with n blunt instru¬ ment print the desired wording. To some fluorspar (calcium fiouride) placed in a metal dish, add enough concentrated sulphuric acid to mois¬ ten the powder. Place the glass, with the marked side down, over the metal dish containing the above chemicals and leave it over night. In the morn¬ ing, scrape the paraffin off and the de¬ sired words will be etched on the glass. RED, ROUGH, SORE HANDS May Be Soothed and Healed by Usa of Cuticura. Trial Frea. Nothing so soothing and healing for red, rough and irritated hands as Cuti¬ cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. Soak hands on retiring in hot Cuticura soapsuds. Dry, and gently anoint hands with Cuticura Ointment. A one-night treatment workB wonders. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. The Suburbanite. “What’s the matter with your fin¬ ger, Babhe, that you’ve got it ban¬ daged all the way up?” “They're not bandages. They’re strings to remind me of my wife’s com¬ missions to bring home tonight.” RELIABLE REMEDY RESTORES KIDNEYS For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder rem¬ edy. It is a physician’s prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi¬ cine. Dr. Kilmer used it for years in his private practice. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature in¬ tended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it will help you. No other remedy can successfully take its place. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. HAD A FEAR OF LIGHTNING Lifelong Dread Made Woman Uncon¬ scious and She Died From Fright. During a thunderstorm at Newton, N. J., a woman who “through all her life of fifty years had felt a nervous dread of lightning” became uncon¬ scious from fright and died. Cannot the multitudes of otherwise rational people who are obsessed by the same dread tuke counsel of the fate of this unfortunate and allay their fears? asks the New York World. They suffer an access of terror in every thunderstorm, and in effect un¬ dergo the agony of death many times. Yet there are few other forms of death so painless or so remote. In 1912 in the whole country only 243 per¬ sons were killed by lightning, of whom but 42 were females. Women, who mainly feel this fear, should be en¬ couraged by their greater immunity. But, in fact, twice as many people are burned to death in conflagrations in a year as are killed by thunderbolts, and the number of those who die from organic heart disease compared with those who die from lightning is as 354 to 1. * No doubt the superstition that has attached from the earliest times to deaths by lightning has had some¬ thing to do with the survival of the fear. People who view their inescap¬ able exit from this world with philos¬ ophy should be ready to accept a light¬ ning stroke as an end as easy as any other. It is too instantaneous to ad¬ mit of physical sensation, while the fear-ridden are assured that if the flash is seen the sufferer is safe. Regretful Memories. What has become of the old-fash¬ ioned steer that grew the cheaper cuts?' It's awfully hard for the average nsr.n to look in a mirror and believe he was once a cute baby. back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that it Won’t make you sick. Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You’ll know it next morn¬ ing, because you will wake up feel¬ ing fine, your liver will be working, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. Dodson’s Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and cannot salivate. Give it to your chil¬ dren. Millions of people are using Dodson’s Liver Tone Instead of dan¬ gerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel Is alaiost stopped entirely here.—Adv. THE HI8H QUALITY SEWINB MACHINE NEV-fefiQME NOT SOLO UNDER ANY OTHER NAME Write for free booklet Points to be considered before purchasing a Sewing Machine.” Learn the facts. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO., ORANGE,MASS. The good Samaritan didn’t wait to be introduced to the man who had fallen among thieves. MOTHER, ATTENTION! Gold Ring for Baby Free. Get a 25c Bottle of Baby Ease from any drug store, mail coupon as di¬ rected and gold ring (guaranteed), proper size, mailed you. Baby Ease cures Bowel Complaints and Teething Troubles of Babies.—Adv. Just Trying to Boss. “Sometimes,” said Uncle Eben, “a man gits de notion dat he’s upliftin’ tie human race when he’s only tryin’ to boss It around.” THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH. You will look ten years younger if you darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by using “La Croolo” Hair Dressing.— Adv. Ceramics. Blink—He thinks ceramics is a fool¬ ish hobby. Blank—Yet I’ve seen him deep in his cups many and many a time.—Town Topics. RESEARCH WORK IN AMERICA Future Will Witness Wider Applica¬ tion of Principle Which Has Al¬ ready Done So Much. Prophecy is a double-adged tool with n peculiar facility for injuring the user, but the activity of the present leads one to predict that each suc¬ ceeding year will bring us nearer to the state in which the research work of the country will be national in both scope and effort. The federal government and the states have done and are conducting research of fmmenes value to agricul¬ ture, the foundation of industry; but the future will witness a more general application of this principle—an actiVe national Interest In industrial re¬ search, and this will serve as a healthy subsidy for American manufacturers. Research has enabled our industries to make rapid strides. The recogni¬ tion of this fact has occasioned a re¬ cent awakening to an increased sense of appreciation of the need of greater facilities for insuring the scientific de¬ velopment and extension of Industry and commerce and of promoting indus¬ trial research. As the acorn grow* to be the mighty oak, so chil¬ dren when rightly nour¬ ished, grow to be sturdy men and women. Good flavor and the es¬ sential nourishing elements for mental and physical de¬ velopment of children are found in the famous food — Grape-Nuts Made of whole wheat and malted barley, this pure food supplies all the nutriment of the grains in a most easily di¬ gested form. It does the heart good to see little folks enjoy Grape-Nuts and cream. “There’s a Reason” Sold by Grocers.