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Calomel Today! Sick Tomorrow!
I Guarantee Dodson’s Liver Tone
Don't take nasty, dangerous calomel when bilious,
constipated, headachy. Listen to me!
Calomel makes you sick; you lose a
day’s work. Calomel is quicksilver
and it salivates; calomel injures your
liver.
If you are bilious, feel lazy, slug¬
gish and all knocked out, if your bow¬
els are constipated and your head
aches or stomach is sour, just take a
spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver
Tone instead of using sickening, sali¬
vating calomel. Dodson’s Liver Tone
is real liver medicine. You'll know it
next morning because you will wake
up feeling fine, your liver will be work¬
ing, your headache and dizziness gone,
your stomach will be sweet and bow¬
els regular. You will feel like work¬
ing. You’ll be cheerful; full of vigor
and ambition.
Your druggist or dealer sells you a
bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone for a
Old Mates at Odds.
It was something of a shock when
at La Cateau British battalions who
bear “Gibraltar" on their colors first
encountered Hanoverian units with
same distinction, won by their ances¬
tors when hired by George III in his
capacity as king of England from him
self as elector of Hanover to help in
Eliott's famous defense of the rock.—
London Spectator.
The Trouble.
She—Alice and 1 can hardly under¬
stand each other over the phone.
He—Wey, talk one at a time.
An Over-ripe Tomato
and other over- ripe vegetables or traits often cans?
very serious Bowel Trouble in hot weather. Cheek
it as quickly as possible. Get a bottle of 0ROVUTS
BAB 7 BUWHL MEDICINE, a safe and snre remedy
for Summer Diarrhoeas. It Ls just as effective ioi
Adults as for Children.
Some men would die young If they
were compelled to make a living.
What The Packers
Do For You
Not very many years ago in the
history of the world, the man that lived
in America had to hunt for his food,
or go without.
Now he sits down at a table and
decides what he wants to eat; or his
wife calls up the market and has it sent
home for him. And what he gets is
incomparably better.
Everyone of us has some part in
the vast human machine, called
society, that makes all this conven¬
ience possible.
The packer’s part is to prepare
meat and get it to every part of the
country sweet and fresh—to obtain it
from the stock raiser, to dress it, cool
it, ship it many miles in special refrig
gerator cars, keep it cool at distrib¬
uting points, and get it into the
consumer’s hands — your hands —
through retailers, all within about
two weeks. .
For this service—so perfect and
effective that you are scarcely aware
that anything is being done for you—
you pay the packers an average profit
of only a fraction of a cent a pound
above actual cost on every pound of
meat you eat.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
few cents under my personal guaran¬
tee that it will clean your sluggish
liver better than nasty calomel; it
won’t make you sick and you can eat
anything you want without being sali¬
vated. Your druggist guarantees that
each spoonful will start your liver,
clean your bowels and straighten you
up by morning or you get your money
back. Children gladly take Dodson’s
Liver Tone because It is pleasant tast¬
ing and doesn’t gripe or cramp or
make them sick.
I am selling millions of bottles of
Dodson’s Liver Tone to people who
have found that this pleasant, vege¬
table liver medicine takes the place of
dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle on
my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask
your druggist about me.—Adv.
Find Ancient Roman Art.
Excavators in Cyrene have recently
made a number of valuable discoveries
| of ancient art dating from the early
Roman period. The latest include two
magnificent statues which were found
in Beda—one the likeness of a Roman
j I other matron of “Winged the second Victory,” century, which and will the
a
be placed in the museum of Benghazi.
At Cyrene the exploration is par¬
ticularly active of late, and has
brought to light a number of busts
and statues. The latest is a temple
with a colossal statue of Demeter and
a long inscription from the third cen¬
tury It. C.
j I Many a man with a powerful voice
] has a dent where hi§ bump of intelli¬
j gence ought to be.
The proper material for umbrellas Is
i watered silk.
[THE CLEVELAND COMEK CLEVELAND. GEORGIA.
Newsy Paragraphs
Of State Interest
St. Marys.—-On a sample four-acre
tract,- in Charlton county L. Knapp
has grown a crop of tobacco that he
thinks will net him at least a thou¬
sand dollars, and perhaps fifteen hun¬
dred. Grady county is claiming to
have produced 100,000 pounds and
most of it has been sold for 95 cents
per pound.
Metter.—The farmers of this com¬
munity are aroused at the increased
rates for ginning, which are just twice
the rate of last year, and have bought
tile Jones' ginnery for $16,000. A
meeting of the stockholders was call
e 1 to arrange matters for the future.
Hereafter a night and day force will
be operated at the gin. G. W. Smith,
a prominent planter, organized the
move.
Thomasville.—The recent rains have
helped the sugar cane crop in this
county wonderfully and those that
were looking somewhat undersized
have already put on a fine growth and
with more than two months ahead to
grow in will he equal to the best of
crops of cane seen here. Some of the
farmers show a good acreage and
some less than last year, owing to the
injury to some of the seed cane by
cold last winter.
Atlanta.—The Mark A. Hanna Min¬
ing company of Cleveland, Ohio, and
dealers in various ore properties, have
recently purchased valuable mining
properties in Georgia in and around
Paulding county. The “Little Bob”
mine, the Mammoth and Shirley mines,
and independent mineral lands adja¬
cent, were in the purchase. These
mines contain the most valuable py¬
rites ore out of which sulphuric acid
is manufactured. New and extensive
machinery will be at once installed,
and the output will meet a part of
the demand the government is mak¬
ing for sulphuric acid used in the mak¬
ing of all explosives.
Tallapoosa.—Colonel G. R. Hutch¬
ens, mayor of Tallapoosa, aged 52,
died at his residence here after a brief
illness. Mr. Hutchens was one of
the best known men in public life in
Georgia, having been a candidate in
several contests for state officers, and
having also been the manager for Os¬
car Underwood in the campaign in
which Mr. Underwood won out in the
presidential preference primary in
Georgia. He had a wide reputation
as a brilliant political speaker and an
able lawyer. A son of Mr. Hutchens,
Lieutenant Harold Hutchens, is now
with the 8£d division in France.
Atlanta.—September 1 the food ad¬
ministration’s flour sale and consump¬
tion regulations will go on an entirely
new basis. It was announced by Dr.
A. M. Soule, state food administrator.
The flour card system for farmers is
abolished; the 50-50 ruling on the
sale of flour is revised, and flour sub¬
stitutes are confined solely to rye,
barley and corn flour. All flour is to
be pul on a basis of 80 per cent
standard wheat and 20 per cent sub¬
stitutes, according to the new order.
Tile order requires that all corn meal
shall be bought separately from the
off set substitutes in the purchase of
standard wheat flour.
Atlanta.—For $180,000, the upset
p'ice fixed by the court, Joel Hurt,
Atlanta capitalist, was the purchaser
at the sale of the properties of the
Georgia Steel Company, which took
place at the office of Judge C. D. Mc
Cutchen, referee in bankruptcy, at
Dalton. The properties consist of
some 26,00.0 acres of coal and iron
ore land in Dade county, Georgia; a
pig iron blast furnace at Rising Fawn,
Oa., and about 15,000 acres of brown
irpn ore and manganese ore lands in
Bartow county and adjoining in
Cherokee county. The estate includes
also about 2,500 acres in Alabama ad¬
joining the Georgia properties in
Dade county and about an equal num
her of acres of iron ore lands in Ca¬
toosa county, near Ringgold, Ga„ lying
on the Western and Atlantic railroad.
About twelve miles of broad-gauge
railroad are also included.
Atlanta.—Increases in revenues dur¬
ing 1919, based on tax valuations from
every county except Richmond, will,
It was estimated by Comptroller Gen¬
eral William A. Wright, reduce Geor¬
gia’s deficit from $451,576 to $289,767,
or $161,869, even after making allow¬
ance for an increase in appropriations
amounting to $229,701. General
Wright has estimated that the in¬
crease in tax valuations would total
about $75,000,000. Instead they ag¬
gregate $84,000,000, due largely to the
fact that Fulton county, estimated at
the same in last year, developed an
increase of $7,000,000. Thus, after de¬
ducting for collections, the state will
get an increase in revenue of $391,510..
The deficit lor 1918, based on 1917
valuations, totals $451,576. Adding to
this increased appropriations of $229,-
701, made by the last legislature, the
deficit is brought to $681,277. Deduct¬
ing the net increase in revenues
brings the deficit down to $289,767.
been Atlanta—J. chief W. Goldsmith, Jr., has j j
named of the gasoline sec
tion fir the Atlanta district by the !
j fuel administration, of which Dr. L. I
j i
} G. Hardman is administrator for Geor
| gin. Mr. Goldsmith’s duties are prin
| cipMly connected with the rcojuest
| j made that by the ail national automobile fuel administra
tjor, -owners re¬
frain from using their cars on Sun¬
days in order to conserve the supply
of gasoline, which is needed in huge
quantities both by America and her
ai!* s for the prosecution of the war.
Lemon Juice
For Freckles
Girls! Make beauty lotion at
home for a few cents. Try itl
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle,
sunburn and tan lotion, and complex¬
ion whitener, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer lias the lemons and
any drug store or toilet counter will
supply three ounces of orchard white
for a few cents. Massage this sweetly
fragrant lotion into the face, neck,
arms and hands and see how freckles,
sunburn and tan disappear and how
clear, soft and white the skin becomes,
yes! It is harmless.—Adv.
SONG FOR ALL ABLE T0 HEAR
Trouble Is That All People Have Not
Properly Attuned Themselves to
Listen to It.
“There is ever a song somewhere,
my dear,” sings the poet. Let us go
a little further and say that there is
ever a song everywhere—If we have
the ear attuned to it.
The cultured musicians will tell you
that what the masters sing in their
strange and complex studies is the
highest music to those who are trained
to catcli it. But the simple heart finds
the harmony in the simple, lowly mel¬
odies.
What to the one class is purest mu¬
sic is to the other meaningless noise.
If we just knew how to listen we could
love the sings of each. To some the
jingle of is the only #
money music in
the world. It deafens them to all oth¬
er sounds. To some the melody of
their own names spoken in praise is
the only music worth hearing. The
ears of these seem to open inward.
The greedy and the vain shrink their
whole world to their own size.
But to those who can hear it there
is a song in every phase of life. For¬
tunate is he who can hear more than
a very few.—Exchange.
A BRIGHT, CLEAR COMPLEXION
is always admired, and it is the lauda¬
ble ambition of every woman to do all
she can to make herself attractive.
Many of our southern women have
found that Tetterine is invaluable for
clearing up blotches, itchy patches,
etc., and making the skin soft and
velvety. The worst cases of eczema
and other torturing skin diseases yield
to Tetterine. Sold by druggists or sent
by mall for 50c. by Shuptrine Co.,
Savannah, Ga.—Adv.
The gentleman with the cloven foot
often travels with the gentleman with
the cloven breath.
Charity with a string to it uncovers
a multitude of sins.
Proof that Some Women
do Avoid Operations
Mrs. Etta Dorion, of Ogdensburg, Wis., says:
“I suffered from female troubles which caused piercing pains
like a knife through my back and side. I final] .lly lost all my
strength'so_ I had to go to bed. The doctor advised an operation
but I would not listen to it. I thought of what I trad read about
Lydia E. brought Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and tried it. The first
bottle great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me.
All women who have female trouble of any kind should try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.’’
How Mrs. feoyd Avoided an Operation.
Canton, Ohio.—-“I suffered from a female trouble which
caused me much suffering, and two doctors decided that
I would have to go through an operation before I could
get well.
“My mother. who had been helped by Lydia E. Pink¬
ham’s Vegetable Compound, advised me to try it be¬
fore submitting I to an do operation. house It relieved me from I
my troubles so can my work without any
difficulty. I advise any woman who is afflicted with t
female troubles to give trial Lydia and it E. Pinkham’s Vege¬
for table Compound a Marie Boyd, will do as much St., f / //.
them.”— Mrs. 1421 5th ///J
N. E-, Canton, Ohio. J<;
Every Sick Woman Si iornl^TVy
LYDIA E. PINKHAMS
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Before Submitting To An Operation!
LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN.MASS.
You Are Dying By Add
When you have Heartburn, Gas, Bioat, and that Full Feeling
after eating. TAKE ONE
FATONIC
TOR VOUft STOMACffS SAK E )
Get rid of tie Overload and Excess Add and you will fairly feel
the GAS driven out of your body— THE BLOAT GOES WITH IT,
IT GIVES YOU REAL STOMACH COMFORT
Get EATONIC from your Druggist with the DOUBLE GUARANTEE
_S*** 1 fcr "Hdp" Book. Adcnaa Eatonic tinned? Co.. 101S-a4 So. W^Mfa 4w., ChiCMo. HI.
The Malaria Mosquito
A mosquito cannot communicate malaria unless
it is infected with malaria. The bite of a malaria
mosquito will transmit malarial parasites to the
blood of a person and these malarial parasites which
feed on the blood should be destroyed before they
have time to increase in numbers. Malarial Fever is
sometimes called Chills and Fever, Bilious Fever and
Swamp Fever.
Grove's
Tasteless chii! Tonic
possesses the power to entirely neutralize the mala¬
rial poison. The Quinine in GROVE’S TASTELESS
chill TONIC kills the germ and the Iron enriches the
blood. '
You can soon feel the Strengthening, Invigorat¬
ing effect of GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC. It
is an exceptionally good general strengthening tonic
for the Child, for the Mother and all the Family.
Pleasant to take. Price 60c.
Perfectly Harmless. Contains Ho
Nux-Vomica or other Poisonous Drugs •
Grove's chill Tonic Tablets
You can now get Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic in Tablet
form as well as in Syrup, the kind you have always bought. The
Tablets are intended for those who prefer to swallow a tablet
rather than a syrup, and as a convenience for those who travel.
The tablets are called “GROVE’S chill TONIC TABLETS’’ and
contain exactly the same medicinal properties and produce ex¬
actly the same results as Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic which is
put up in bottles. The price of either is 60c.
Puts a ... Distemper
Stop to all
CURES THE SICK.
And prevents others having: the disease no matter hoTV
exposed 00 cents ami $1.15 a bottle, $5.50 and $11.00 a
dozen bottles. All grood druggists and turf goods houses,
Spohn. Medical Co. Goshen, Ind. U. S. A.
Hadn’t Got Acquainted.
Several officers were eating dinner
at the club recently, when one asked:
“Who is that officer sitting at the ta¬
ble opposite us?”
After a long and studied glance one
officer spoke up, “I tldnk that is my
room mate.”
“You think it’s your room mate?”
chorused the three.
“Well, I’m not sure. You see, we’ve
been together three weeks, but When I
get in at, nigh't be Is In bed, and when
I get up in the morning he's out flying.
Judging from tlie back of bis head, I
think he’s the man.”—The Wright
Idea.
Why, of Course, Teacher.
Teacher—Now, Tommie, what part
of speech is silence?
Tommie—Why, uh, I dtinno, unless
It’s the part after everybuddy gits
through talkin’.
The Navy Abroad.
The eight destroyers and less than
1,000 men that marked the beginning
of American naval co-operation with
the allies have been Increased to 250
vessels and 40,000 men, with 3,000 offi¬
cers, says the Manchester Guardian,
in an appreciation of tlie magnitude of
the American naval effort.
Skin Troubles That Itch
Burn and disfigure quickly soothed
and healed by hot baths with Cuti
cura Soap and gentle anointings of On*
tlcura Ointment. For free samples,
address, "Cutieura, Dept. X, Boston,’*
Sold by druggists and by mail. SoaR
25, Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv.
There is a famine in laundry soap la
Copenhagen and other Danish cities.
Petrograd has Asiatic cholera epi¬
demic.