Newspaper Page Text
Spring Colds
Are the Worst
They lead to catarrh and
pneumonia. entire They weaken
the system and leave
it unable to resist the sudden
changes. They interfere with
your digestion and lessen your ac¬
tivity. Neglected they known toon become
that dread disease as sys¬
temic catarrh. Don't neglect them.
It’s costly as well as dangerous.
PERUNA
Will Safeguard You
Have a box of Peruna Tab¬
lets with you for the sudden
cold or exposure. Tone your sys¬
tem up with a regular course of the
liquid Peruna. fortify it against
colds, get your digestion up to nor¬
mal, take care of yourself, and avoid
danger. If you are suffering now
begin the treatment at once. Give
Nature the help she needs to throw
off the catarrhal inflammation, and
again become well.
Peruna has been helping people
for 44 years. Thousands of homes
rely on it for coughs, colds and indi¬
gestion. It’s a good tonic for the
weak, as well.
The Peruna Company
Ohio
Her Paradoxical Position.
“A vessel Is different hi one way
from anything else.”
“VV'liut Is that?”
“It Is when she Is tied up that she
isn’t make any knots.”
IMITATION 18 81NCERE8T 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.
The Reason.
"Why Old you make an open fire in
this room'?” “Because I qaw th<- grate
opportunity for one."
Bnflcllng-up for the Spring Attack at
the Front is a good deal like putting
the body In condition for an invasion
of the germs of grip, pneumonia or
“Spring fever" here at home.
At this time of the year most people
suffer fffira a condition often called
Spring Fever. They feel tired, worn
out, before the day is half thru. They
may have frequent headache* and
sometime* “pimply" or pale akin and
w hite lips. The reason for thla Is that
during the wintertime, shut up with¬
in doors, eating too much meat and
too little green vegetables, one heaps
fuel Into the system which is uot burned
up and the clinkers remain to poison
the system—a clogging up of the circu¬
lation—with inactive liver ami kidneys.
Time to put your house In order.
For an invigorating tonic which will
clarify the Wood, put new life in the
body, sparkle to the eyes, and a
wholesome skin, nothing does so well
as a glyceric herb extract made from
Golden Seal root. Blood and Stone
root, Oregon grape root and Wild
Cherry bark. This can be had in con¬
venient, rendy-to-use tablet form at all
drug stores, sixty cents, and has been
sold for the past fifty y<*ir* as Dr.
Fierce's Golden Medical Discovery. By
reason of the nerves feeding on the
blood, when the blood Is pure the
nerves feel the effect, and neuralgia or
other nerve pains disappear because
such pain Is the cry of the starved
nerves for food. When suffering from
backache, frequent or scanty urine,
rheumatic pains here or there, nr that
constant tired feeling, disorders the simple way
to overcome these Is merely
to obtain Dr. Fierce's Anurlc from
your druggist. Tu tablets, sixty cents.
HAVE YOU A
SWEETHEART,
Son or Brother In training
camps In the American
Army or Navy ? If so, mail
him a package of ALUA’S
100T = EASL the antiseptic
, powder to be shaken into
| the shoes and sprinkled In
the foot-bath. The Ameri¬
can, British and French
troops Ease, because use Allen's it Foot-;'
takes the
Friction from the Shoe and
freshens the feet. It is the ;
greatest comforter for tired, y
aching, tender, swollen feet,
1 soldier* us* and gives relief to corns and
1 foot i*ee bunions.
\ (men The Plattsburg Camp Manual advises
Sin in training to shake Foot-Ease
their shoes each for morning. b’-r. Ask
i yonr dealer to-day a hox of
> Allen’s Foot—Ease, and for a 2c. stamp
) he will mail it for you. What remtau
l brance could be eo acceptable ?
Jbv*- t|P t'3l£3S
M.\RY JOHNSON’S HAIR
Was Short and Kinky
Noxv its Long and Fluffy
She Used
NOAH’S HAIR DRESSING
(.lea 25o. If your dealer can't you wend
i~j Us. Refuse substitute;*. Manufactured by
K- All PRODUCTS COUP , RICHMOND, VA.
COUCHING
aanoyc ethers and hurts yea. Reticle throat
irritation and tickling, and set rid of courhs.
colds and hoarseness by tr.kinj at ones
PISO’S
TTfF CT.FVFT, *VT> mTPR & rT.FTV r FT,ANr) GEORGIA
WILSON ACCEPTS
WAR CHALLENGE
OF THE KAISER
SAYS FORCE ALONE CAN WAKE
TEUTONS FROM DREAM OF
WORLD DOMINION
U- s. MUST WIN THE WAR
j America Must Bend Every Effort
Toward Crushing The Power
Of The Germans
Baltimore.—President Wilson at' a
: great Liberty Loan celebration here,
■ fi av ” America's answer to the German
j drive on the western battle front; to
\ the renewed propaganda for a German
| triade peace, to all proposals to end
the war before Germany i* awakened
from her dream of world dominion.
The president’s answer was:
“Force, force to the utmost, force
without stint or limit, the righteous
j and triumphant force which shall
i make right of law of the world, and
j j ca*t every selfish dominion down in
the dust."
i A few hours before the president
spoke he had reviewed a division of
I citizen soldiers, called only a few
j months ago from the pursuits of
j peace; now transformed into fighting
j men to carry the ideals of America to
> *he battlefields of Europe, at the mo
j ment, a million more of their kind all
, over the land were celebrating the
opening of the third Liberty Loan, and
the orders for mobilizing the first of
the great army of a second million j
were going out to the country.
Those were some of the physical
facts which hacked his words, when,
after reviewing briefly the evidence
that Germany seeks a peace that
would give her world dominion, the
president said:
Fellow Citizens: This is the an
ni versary of our acceptance of Ger* j
many’s live challenge be to fight for our right j
to and free; and for the sa-i
ere d rights of free men everywhere, j
The nation is awake. There Is no
need war* roust" to call cost;* to It. We * 'utmost know what the j j
our sacrifice
liTfts of our fittest rnc*n and, if {
need be, all that we possess. The loan j j
wtbpare met to discuss is one of the
least parts of what we are called ut*on
to give and to do, though In itself im j
pcratlve. The people of the whole
EIHr ii i
skimping and daily sacrifice to lend
our meager earning.*. They- will look
with reprobation and contempt upon
those who can and will not. upon those
who demand a higher rate of interest,
upon those who think of it as a uiere
commcrcial transaction. ! have not
come, therefore, to urge the loan. 1
have come only to give you, if 1 can. a
tnore vivid conception of what it in
for.
“The reasons for this great war,
the reason why it had to come, the
nred to fight Sang it through, and the 1s
sue* that upon its outcome, are
more clearly disclosed now than ever, I
before. It is easy to see just what
this particular loan means, because
the cause we are fighting for stands
more sharply revealed than at any pre
vious crisis of the momentous strug¬
gle. The man who knows least can
now see plainly how the cause of jus
lice stands and what the imperishable
thing is he is asked to invest in. Men
in America may be more sure than
they ever were before that the cause
is the!" own, anil that, if it should
be lost, .heir own great nation’s place
and mission in the world would be lost
with it.
“I.call you to witness, my fellow
countrymen, that at no stage of this
terrible business have 1 judged the
purposes of Germany intemperately.
I should be ashamed in the presence
of affairs so grave, so fraught with the
destinies of mankind throughout all
the world, to speak with truculence,
to use the weak language of hatred or
vindictive purpose. We must judge
as we would be judged. I have sought
to learn the objects Germany has in
this war from the mouths of her own
spokesmen, and to deal as frankly
with them as I wish them to deal with
me. I have laid bare our own ideals,
our own purposes, without reserve or
doubtful phrase, and have asked them
to say as plainly what it is that they
seek.
“We have ourselves proposed no in
justice, no aggression. We are ready,
whenever the final reckoning is made,
to be just to the German people, deal
fa’rly with the German power, as with
j all others. between There peoples can in the he final no differ- juris-1
j ence righteous'
ment, if it is indeed to be a
i judgment. To propose anything but
! ; justice, even-handed and dispasslon
ate justice, to Germany at any time,
whatever the outcome of the war,
; would be to renounce and dishonor our
I own cause. For we ask nothing that
1 we are not willing to accord.
I “It has been with this thought that
j t have souhgt to learn whether from those who jus¬
*;>o!te for Germany it was
tice or dominion and the execution
of their own will upon the other na¬
tions of the world that the German
leaders were seeking. They have an¬
swered, answered avowAl in unmistakable
terms. They have that it was
v justice, but dominion and the un
Advire Change In Wheat Prices
Washington.—The agricultural ad¬
visory committee, composed of twen
tv-f.mr ni-.r'.cuftoral and live stock pro¬
ducers, submitted to Secretary Hous¬
ton an.l Food Administrator Hoover
recommendations for increased food
output to n sist the nation and its as
ia-es in the prosecution of tjje war.
The committee has been in consul¬
tation with the agricultural depart
nun’’ an.! the food administration, a
week. Ti e commendations declare
for a continuation of the present pr:-e
of $2.20 far wheat.
hindered execution of their own will.
"The avowal has not come from
Germany's statesmen, it has come
from her military leaders, who are her
real rulers. Her statesmen have said
that they wished peace, and were
ready to discuss its terms whenever
their opponents were wilting to sit
down at the conference table with
them. Her present chancellor has
said—in indefinite and uncertain
terms, indeed, and in phrases that of
tea seem to deny their own meaning
peace shou.d oe based upon the prim
tuples which own^n^e^naf^Ufe^e^LAA ' ■
he our
Brest-Litovsk her civil delegates spoke
in similar terms; professed their de¬
sire to conclude a fair peace and ac¬
cord to the peoples with whose for¬
tunes they were dealing the right to
choose their own allegiance. But ac¬
tion accompanied and foilowed th<*
profession. Their _______^ ^
men who for military masters, the
her purpose act in Germany and exhibit
execution, proclaimed
not Ssfek^what^^**^ ^n 011 Lkrafntln ' ^’ e can ’
Russia, in Finland, the
Roumama. The real test of feeir jus
tice and fair play has come. From this
we may judge the rest. They are en
which lo ond/ h R r»f ia a C n eap trlumpb na “ on c f° ifl
iesf Jong take t f'„wt^f a t ^ Pi ^l fc P ;
the m^y.^Thefr tiro
time at tbfer fari
fexsiom are forgotten. They nowhere
set up justice, hut everywhere impose
their power and exploit everything for
their own use and aggrandizement ;
and the peoples* of conquered prov
inces are invited to be free under their
dnmininnt dominion!
“An- we not Justified in believing
that shey would do the same things
at their western front if they were
not face to face with armies whom
even their countless divisions cannot
overcome? if, when they have feU
their check to he final they should
propose favorable and equitable term.
wi *R regard to Belgium and France
an<J ,taI F coulcl they blame us If we
concluded that that they they did did so only to
assure themselves of a free hand
Russia and the east?
“Their purpose is undoubtedly to
make al! the Slavic peoples, all the
free and ambitious nations of the Bal¬
tic peninsula all the lands that Tur¬
key has dominated and misruled, sub
eo * t0 t,H ’ ir wil1 anil ambition, and
iiROn that dominion an empire
°/ ^ orc<? upon which they fancy tha'
can f r ect an empire of gain and
onunercial supremacy—an empire as
oo-tile to the America* as to the Ku
^ '’h it will overawe—an P^r- eni*
pire will utimateljr master
s ^ a * the peoples of the far
cast ; in such a program our ideals,
hleals of justice and humanity and
“ rt * v , the principle of the free self
determintaion , of nations upon which
world insists can play
trade tsns^&J&s: follow ss
must the flag, whether
those to whom it is taken welcome ft
or not, that the people of the world
are to be made subject to the patron
age and overlordshin of those wtm
have the power to enforce it.
“Thai program once carried out.
America and all who care or dare
to stand with her must arm and pre¬
pare themselves to contest the mas
!h7rShts e orremWmn m mam v.-ho’ y the Sit
of women and of all are w eak,
must tor the time being bo trodden
under foot and disregarded, and the
old, age-long struggle for freedom and
Hght .again at its beginning. Every¬
thing that America has lived for, and
lovtMl, and grown great to vindicate
and bring to a ghffious realizationjwtll
have fallen in utter ruin and ihe gates
of mercy once more pitilessly shut
upon mankind’
“The thing is preposterous and im¬
possible; and yet ia not that what
the whole course and action of the
German armies has meant wherever
they have moved? i do not wish,
even in this moment of utter disillu¬
sionment, to judge harshly or unright¬
eously. I judge only what the Ger¬
man arms have accomplished with un
pitying thoroughness throughout ev¬
ery fair region they have touched.
“What, then, are we to do? For
myself, I ant ready, ready still, ready
even now, to discuss a fair and just
aud honest peace at any time that it
is sincerely purposed—a peace in
which the strong and the weak shall
fare alike. But the answer, when I
proposed such a peace, came from the
German commanders in Russia, and I
cannot mistake the meaning of the
answer,
"1 accept the challenge. I know
that you accept it. All the world shall
know that you accept it. it shall ap¬
pear in the utter sacrifice and self
forgetfulness with which we shall
give all that we love and -all that we
have to redeem the world and make
it fit for free men tike ourselves to
live in. This now is the meaning of
all that we do. Let everything that
we say, my fellow country, everything
that we henceforth plan and accom¬
plish, ring true to this response tilt
the majesty and might of our con¬
certed power and shall fill the thought
and utterly defeat the force of those
who flout and misprize what we honor
and hold dear. Germany has once
more said that force, and force alone,
shall decide whether justice and peace
shall reign in the affairs of men.
whether right as America conceives it
or dominion as she conceives it or shall
determine the destinies of mankind.
There is, therefore, but one response
from us: Force, force to the utmost,
force without stint or limit, the righ*
ous and triumphant force which shall
make right the law of the world, and
cast, every selfish dominion down ia
the dust.”
English Landed With Japs In Russia
Moscow.—The British, as well as the
Japanese, landed forces at Vladivos
; iok. The local authorities had no
warning of this action. According to
I a semi-official disnatch from Moscow,
I the following official statement has
| been issued Japanese here: “In at reference Vladivostok, to fee
landing of
the council of people’s commissaries
is undertaking political steps and at
the same time orders all the Soviets
| {to of Siberia to Incursion offer armed into resistance Russian
an enemy
j territory.”
STATE MUST AMEND
ITS HIGHWAY LAWS
IF GEORGIA IS TO REAP BENEFIT
OF FEDERAL AID, CENTRAL
j AUTHORITY NECESSARY
STATE NEWS OF INTEREST
! I
^ N * WS ' temS ° f lmpcrtanc< Gath '
ered From AH Parts
Of The State
full Atlanta.—Before benefits of the Georgia federal can get fund! the ]
aid
for good roads, $809,009 of which is j
i aow and will be available on the first
I of -lob, it will be essential to so amend
< the highway laws of Georgia as to
concelnra ^ the authority in one head
I *? dtea4 TTf oi 5laT!D connecmg S to depend the m
* upon
! c<M)peratl0n 85 to detaj5a of the conn
throu sh ,
1 t,es which such highways are
to be bU i! i. ™" 9t?ms t0 * th *
^ , ni °” ° , t Rf ctor Page direcwr o{ * he
'
5?!? ST- uepartme a d ? 1 ’ * ,hW Sl “
3 CO! ? i€ reBOC “. in ^ °. j
' a
f ^ - j -ederal 1 ® a PP°rtionnjent aid .und far for lfilt G- and r-j
'
5400,000, J"? amounts, and on in the round first numbers, day of the to (
n(>w fiscal year the 1918 apportionate.
1 amounting to the same amount will
be available. The federal department j j
is anxious to disburse this money ac- i
Cording to law, and several roads \
have already been approved as proj-;
[ eetgz subject to legal validation by the
; submission of specifications and the
compliance by counties, which re-1
roads traverse, with the federal
qui cements. , i
_
e-L.tr conference Of War Agencies
Atlanta.—Governor Dorsey, as head j
of the state council of defense, wil!
call together for a round table confer
Otic- In the heads of all the war agencies j
the state to discuss and further s
tematize Georgia’s part in the national
war program. The government calls
the meeting on recommendation of
the council of national war defense, j
who name as one of the purposes of i
the conference that there be a com
&*** understanding of the work being
done, thus preventing new lines of
; work being started and organizations
f created that would duplicate unnece®
-arily ’ those already ' under way
Many Sign* Petition For Man’s Parole ' i
1 Jzzzzzsszz. sszrx
on parole commission of H. B. when Nuckies; the petition for of j
convicted
involuntary manslaughter for shooting -
H. M. Liveiy, a Norcross merchant.
was heard. Nuckies has already serv !
ed one year of a thre year sentence.
The two shooting years ago took over place a horse on Christmas deal. It j
claimed that the merchant be- !
was ;
fired in self-defense. ^ A petition sign- I j
C -d win.nett by thirteen county hundred and by citizens others was of j
pr -anted to the commission.
V*rational Work In The State Schools.
Atlanta.—James P. Munroe, chair- j
man of the federal board for vocation- ;
a! training, addressed members of the j
Georgia state vocational board at the |
sta ,, . ,
-
t'nsl studies in Georgia school. The
jrgia board, at this meeting, approv-1 !
■ ■J plans for the training of teachers
in agricultural and Industrial lines School at j
the i fate university, Georgia j
of Technology and the three state nor
mats. It was also agreed to institute
this training as far as may be possi¬
ble at the new negro normal school at
Albany.
New York Man Buys $100,000 Ranch
Savannah.—H. C. Prichard of New
York, Thomas Mattison of Ohio and
several others have become the own¬
ers of 5.009 acres of land in Effingham
county near Pineora for a considera¬
tion of about one hundred thousand
dollars. The big tract will be used
for a live stock ranch. Blooded ani¬
mals will be shipped here from the
west and the plantation will be im¬
proved along modern lines.
_
P,a " Road „ . ... Work , For ^ lnterned , . , Germans _
Atlanta.—Thirteen hundred Germans
■ Interned in this state will, it is be
I Roved, soon be at work on Georgia
roada> for judge T. E, Patterson, the
chairman of the state highway com¬
mission. is in Washington completing
the arrangements necessary before
they can be used. The Cobb county
an:k-"Titles have already agreed to ful¬
fill the requirements which will enti¬
tle them to some of the alien labor.
Alleged Deserter Taken From Officers
Gtonnville.—Near GlennvilR*. Connie
Todd, an alleged deserter from the
United States army, was rescued by J
Ids -' by friends S. O. after Waters, he had chief been of captur- notice j |
of Gleanville, and Wallace Perkins, an j
er•soldier, who had put him under ar-;
rest
Those 'Denouncing Wilson Warned
Dublin.—“This war is not the gov- i
ernnieat’s but the 1
war, our war. war
M every man, woman and child in
titis country," declared Hon. W. H.
Purv.-ell, in a speech, at the Liberty
Lean demonstration. “In a sense,” he |
sa>d, “it is a holy war, in defense of i
our religion against as well as who our liberty.” j
He warned men continu-:
ally criticised the administration; who !
are fighting Wilson, a man who will'
go down in history as the greatest
exponent and embodiment of princi
; plea of democracy in America.
Provided To Fight Epidemic*
Atlanta.—Governor Dorsey athori*.
the use of money from the execu¬
contingent fund to combat the
of smallpox and meningitis in
state. Araragemeats were im¬
made by the state board
health to launch its offensive and
Joseph Bowdoin of Adairs rille,
appointed state epidemiolo¬
and was ©amaalssioned to rove
state for one month, seeking oat
of epidemics, studying them
every phase, and instructing local
in how to prevent them
governor's appropriation from the
fund wifi be sufficient !o
a month'** campaign in the
If after thirty days, the emerg¬
stilt exists and further funds are
it is understood that they will
given the state board
__.
Joseph’s Church Oa "raged By Fire
Macon,—Best ruot «M* St. Joseph’s
churoh. s half million dollar
os upper Poplar street, '-'as
averted when a fire was dl.s
owN m in the sacristy. When the
trnv the flames were shoot¬
toward a large oil curtain which
■ .rated ■ e stem;- frvtr. the main
In five minut-s more . -
would have rrachc
. scaffolding.,U -h , now In -
where fre-coer> and painters
at vor j. The flames w-re soon
bus nos before con#id
rabie danMlg ^ had been done,
Over Grave Of Lumj5kin
Athens.—Chancellor D. Cl. Barrow of
university, and president of the
of trustees for the Oconee ceme¬
in which several governors and
court justices and other
former eGorgians are bur¬
erected over the grave of Gov.
iison Lumpkin an imposing monu¬
The grave is situated in a per
circular lot reserved ween Gov
Pumpkin deeded a- a gift ’ti~
tract of the “old'' cemetery to the
of Athens many years ago. This
. ar ,ot ,s , on the aEM1 ' v °* . a sharp .
’
Is Flooded With Spoiled Corn
Atlanta.—The influx of spoiled corn
Georgia has grown to such pro
that shipment sc are being
and destroyed un ler the direc
of P. A. Methvin, state pure food
In Augusta, $35,009 worth
spoiled corn was condemned and
denatured so that it could not
used as stock food. This corn had
been paid for. There 1... are 10,
„ bushels uu.-uc.--i of u. meal ... in ... the city of „„ At- ...
under condemnation for similar
ssas
bad corn and meal are now tied
on account of its condition
-
Packing Plant Certain
Thomasviile.—ft the actfoft of a
Krou; , o{ business men is fol
up in a uko miinnPr b y others
a packing plant for Thomasviile
be to^mtu^one a certainty. These feet thousand and
hundred
„ ars for thP p!ant an( j w ju see what
Ucme l0 make lt three hun
thousand dollars, or enough to
the plant with sufficient working
to make It easy to finance.
Workers Get Increase In Pay
Columbus.—An increase of S 1-2 per
in the wages of nine thousand
workers in Columbus has been
«int
an annual increase of wages m
in,i " str >' of ? ; !20.000. Since the
ar the wages cot ' on of » aC all 1 ” I °™ S ni^ va e ** the rh«
ase raBSlng fr0m 33 t0 40 P r
Sam Plans War Against Fly
Atlanta.—Uncle Sam, in connection
the city of Atlanta, will inausu- .
at once a “swat the fly” cam¬
Acting in conjunction with
John Jentzen, of the city sani¬
department. Dr. Percy Ahrons of
federal health service and his staff
inspectors will enteb the campaign
flies in Atlanta.
Gets 25 Years For Desertion
Macon.—Burt Waters of Florella,
member of company A, 106th am¬
train, has been sentenced by
general courtmartial at Camp j
to serve 25 years in the Unit- -
States disciplinary barracks at Fort
for desertion.
Rail Board Survey Of Augusta
Augusta.—City council has asked
James R. Littleton to request
state railroad commission to of¬
visit Augusta for the purpose
making a survey of the service
here by the street railway, the
company and the gas com¬
County Completes Quota
Lyerly.—Chattooga county’s quota .
f J02 men for the first call under
selective service law was complet
tvhen four white registrants were
to Camp Gordon, twelve negro
having been sent to Camp
Kans.
Men Killed By Police Chief {
Millen.—Frank Godbee and R. C. j
are dead from pistol wounds 1
by Chief of Police J. E Par
when he went to the Godbes j
at the request ofr neighbors to
the two men who were said to j
disturbance by ’
been creating a
sjiots from a rifle. Chief Par¬
was wounded in the right hand
Godbee opened v fire upon him
a shotgun, but the wound is net j
serious.
A CHILD DOESN’T
LAUGH AND PLAY
IF CONSTIPATED
LOOK, MOTHER! IS TONGUE
COATED, BREATH FEVERISH
AND STOMACH SOUR?
•CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIG8*
CAN'T HARM TENDER STOM¬
ACH, LIVER, BOWELS.
tomerrow. Children simply will not
take the time from play to empty their
bowels, which become clogged up with
waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach
sour.
Look at the tongue, mother! If
coated, or your child is listless, cross,
feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn't
ent heartily, full of cold or has sore
throat or any other children's ail
meat, give a teaspoonful of “Cali¬
fornia Syrup of Figs," then don’t
worry, because It is perfectly harm¬
less. and in a few hours all this con
.-tipatioa poison, sour bile and fer¬
menting waste will gently move out of
the bowels, aud you have a well, play¬
ful child again. A thorough “inside
cleansing” is oftimes all that is neces¬
sary. It should be the first treatment
given in any sickness.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.
Ask your druggist for a bottle of “Cal¬
ifornia Syrup of Figs," which has
full directions for babies, children of
all ages and for grown-ups plainly
primed on the bottle. Look carefully
and see that it is made by the “Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup Company."—Adv.
More Than One Way.
Jonah entered the whale.
“Another way of saving daylight,”
he remarked.
CORNS LIFT OUT!
COSTS FEW CENTS
Drops of magic! Doesn't*
hurt one bit! Drop a little
Freezone on a touchy corn,
instantly that corn stops hurt¬
ing, then you lift it off with
the fingers. No pain! Try it!
tVhy wait? Your druggist sells
a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few
cents, sufficient to rid your feet of
every hard corn, soft corn, or corn
between the toes, and calluses,
without soreness or irritation.
Freezone is the much talked of
discovery of the Cincinnati genius.
Have you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
Tak-KHRCXIACIDE to rsmevre theca n»e
an j Ur.T,. thti poison troui lUe system.
'■aHsiaiaoB os tiik usinz
PITS BllitllTlsa OX THI OUTSIDE”
At All Druggists
Jss. Baily & Sor, Wholesale Distribotora
Baltimore, Md.
PR8ST PROOF CAB3AGE PLANTS
Srerpr-j.'-v •ils£ill barer paying charges. POST PATE
^ ■“ ldb. 3f.c SSc
i,a»,r taai
1 NtV
TOMATO PL A April 1st
,«. 1 “‘^paid
piSS’S !:8J i “ r9 ‘
1-008, 3.25 2 !■ t. o. b. POST m PAID 5oc
5.0JC at v J - nerd Sc.
D.F.JA LAIISO >, SUMMERVILLE',
; Seal SkinltouMes
n _ That lien and Burn
> with Cuticura/
1 Q ■ ) Th purify,the cSo ap to Ointment cleanse ard to
i „ , soothe and heal.
' -v Evern
•' 'rherc Soap25<0intineat25t50i
w. N. u., ATLANTA, NO. 15-1913.