Newspaper Page Text
Half a Century Ago
Half a Century Ago, every community could
be supplied to some extent with locally dressed
meat, drawing on live stock raised nearby.
Now two-thirds of the consuming centers,
with millions of people, are one to two thousand
miles away from the principal live-stock produc¬
ing sections, which are sparsely settled.
The American meat packing industry of
today is the development of the best way to
perform a national service.
The function of providing meat had to de¬
velop accordingly. Those men who first grasp¬
ed the elements of the changing problem created
the best facilities to meet it—large packing
plants and branch houses at strategic points,
refrigerating equipment (including cars), car
routes, trained organization, profitable outlets
for former waste — which became the nat¬
ural, inevitable channels for the vast flow of
meat across the country.
If there were a better way to perform this
necessary service, American ingenuity and
enterprise would have discovered it, and others
would now be using it.
During 1918, Swift & Company has earned
a profit on meats (and meat by-products) of less
than ZYt cents per dollar of sales—too small a
profit to have any appreciable effect on prices.
Swift & Company,
U. S. A.
jSKmi
Send 2c stamp for
illustrated Wmsnr &
Newton catalogue
Artists’ Materials
Colors, including Special
Chart for mixing, FREE, a
most valuable aid. Gives
explicit directions for right
solars for all subjects and how to mix.
American Blue Print Co., Inc.
E. 42nd St. Special Agents New York
M City
' "V. % We Pay The
ost
For
1 CMli! liberal grading, make quickest return*
Not agents, w ho sell Oft commission, but
I WkALcRS, who boy outright and pay highest
I prices. Write for latest lists. Makes shipment,
I mmI we‘ll send check bv return mad At your
I fwtueu. we hold your fun separate six days and
I j H our prices are not satisfactory W| return your
taapment at our expense Reference: any bank
I *a New Or leans.
[HWAINER & Co, Orleans,
frost proof
Cabbage Plants
Mmrtj Jeraey and Charleston Wakefield, Sue*
wwhuuoii and Fiat Dutch- By express, 500, $1.25:
B,oaa, StOO; 5,000 at *1.75; 10,000 and up at $1.50,
F. O. B- here. By Parcel Post, prepaid, 100, 85c;
BOGLSI SB; 1.000, $2.50. Wholesale and retail.
Dl F- JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C.
HAIR PARKER’S
BALSAM
Beauty to Cray or Faded Hair.
SQo. and $i oo at Druinrieta
CABBAGE PLANTS l u HT,
* plants ©•WJ grown SOU. from selected seed. Any
P* r 1,000; $v.25. Farm Satisfaction gu*r
Bntarpnse Truck Georgetown S. C
WE TREAT Tuberculosis
•oBHiff Writ* to us for information. Caribbean Sea
Medicine Co.. *60 :-a L»wtt»« A**au*, si. l. uu, So.
Cuq&e History of World’s War "i'ESS*
of stirring photographic battle scenes, maps, etc.
Bi*commissions. K. * Agents’outfit * Qa., t'nlWrtvm free. BWf Send St. Uals, U)c for Wo.
I®. .
$P$T CASH tor^lberf^BondM and £tu**#oU». Bonds pa: rtlf for
mO»r ferws* a SO* Ettbanjre. Ifapotls. 1 Its#.
0k. Doran's Worm Remedy SB?*!™—
ftk; mil Answer ixiran Drug Ce-, I’.Jacih, Ky
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND. GEORGIA
Mystery Explained.
When ti young woman approached
an elderly man in a department store
the other day and said, “You don't
know me. but I know you very well,”
the latter replied:
“1 tun afraid you are mistaken."
“Aren’t you Mr. Unison?"
“I surely am.”
“I have known you and your fam¬
ily for some time."
“I can't just place you.”
“No. you don't know me, but f know
more about you and your wife, and
about your family affairs, than some
of your closest relations.”
“How in the world—”
“Oh. there is nothing mysterious
about it: your little girl Is one of my
pupils in school.”—Youngstown Tele¬
gram.
Get New Kidneys!
The kidneys are the most overworked
organs fail of the humah body, and when they
throwing in their off the work poisons of filtering developed out and the
in
system, things begin to happen.
One of the first warnings is pain or stiff
ness in the lower part of the back, highly
colored urine; loss of appetite; indiges
tion: irritation, or even stone in the blad¬
der. These symptoms indicate a condition
that may lead to that dreaded and fatal
malady. said Bright’* disease, for which there
is to be no cure.
Do not delay a minute. At the first in¬
dication of trouble in the kidney, liver,
bladder or urinary' organs start taking
Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules, and
save yourself before it is too late. Instant
treatment der troubles. is necessary A delay in is often kidney and blad
fatal.
You can almost certainly find immediate
relief in Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules,
For more than 200 years this famous prep
aration has been an unfailing remedy for
all kidney, bladder and urinary troubles,
It is the pure, original Haarlem Oil your
sules great-grandmother each day will used. keep About two can
you toned up anu
feeling does tine. Get it at any drug store, and
if it not give you almost immediate
relief, your money will be refunded. Be
sure you get the GOLD MEDAL brand.
None other genuine. In boxes, three
sizes.—Adv.
When some persons catch on to a
joke they never let go.
#/ A Wholesome, Cleansing,
* B fill 1* i Refreshing ij —Murine am) for Ncaliag Red
0 en
E? 1T _ _ 6 ness. Soreness. Granula
J tion,ItchingandBurning
of the Eyes or Eyelids;
"2 Drops” After the Movies. Motoring or Golf
will win your confidence. Ask Yout Druggist
for Murine when your Eyes Need Care. M-i3
Murine Lye Remedy Co., Chicmro
OEVaOPMENT OF
CROPS PLANNED j
I
BUSINESS LEADERS IN GEORGIA ;
ON THE PRODUCTION
OF FOOD
STATE NEWS^ Of INTEREST
Brief News Items Of Importance Gath,
ered From All Parts
Of The State
Atlanta.—Plans have been projected I
by the business men of the state of | I
Georgia that if developed will place j
Georgia among the foremost states in !
the Union in agricultural production. I
The meeting was held in Atlanta. Rep¬
resentatives from the banking, manu¬
facturing and agricultural interests of
the state passed unaniinonsly on res¬
olutions to “unite all interests in the
state and to strengthen its farming
industries, increase food production,
stimulate animal industries, encour¬
age diversified fanning and to promote
the construction of good roads and the
establishment of good schools in the
rural districts.” The meeting was ad¬
dressed by Charles G. Baer of Chica¬
go, national agricultural expert. He j
stressed the fact that there must be |
close co-operation between business I
men and farmers if agricultural devel¬ j
opment be obtained. Doctor Soule of i
the Georgia State College of Agricul¬ j
ture, discussed the relation of increas¬ !
ed food production in Georgia and his
personal experience as food adminis¬ i
trator of the state for the past two I
years. He stated that in the past ten |
years the state had doubled its produc¬ |
tion of corn and stated that Georgia j
hogs. lias produced Commissioner this year J. J. one Brown million of |
I
the department of agriculture indorsed
the fact brought out in the speech of
Mr. Baer that to secure increased farm
production there must be closer co¬
operation between the business man
and the farmer.
Brown Predicts Higher Cotton Prices
Atlanta.—The cotton holding move¬
ment, outlined and supported by the
cotton states advisory marketing
board, is bringing results in the ad¬
vance of the price of cotton, is the
opinion of J. J. Brown, commissioner
of agriculture and chairman of the
board, who stated that an absolute
pledge of reduction in cotton acre¬
age to the extent of 50 per cent of
the 1918 area would be asked of the
farmers of the Soutli if necessary to
crown cotton king. Plans for the re¬
duction of acreage and the further
holding of cotton will be formulated
at a meeting which will be called' by
the cotton states advisory market
board to be held in New Orleans at
an early date.
Must Read Bible In Public Schools
Atlanta.—A resolution presented to
the board of education by A. C. Bur¬
ton calling for the reading of the Bi¬
ble daily in the various grades of the
public schools was adopted. •The pa¬
per states that this is done because
the Bible "contains the recognized ten¬
ets and teachings of the followers of
Christ and contains the faith of the
Hebrews as well. Tills can be done
without entering into a denomination¬
al discussion, if proper discretion is ex
ercised.” It will be the duty of each
teacher, the resolution recites, to read
to her class at the opening of school
every morning a lesson from the Bible,
to consist of ten or more verses.
Game Experts Boost Okeefenokee
Atlanta.—The famous Okeefenokee
swamp of Georgia, the generally, vig¬
orously condemned Okeefenokee. was
praised by two game experts as one
of the greatest sanctums for game in
the United States. Fresh from a
hunting trip there, President Crump¬
ton of the Rhode Island fish and game
commission and Fish and Game Com¬
missioner Adams of Massachusetts,
guests here of Georgia's fish and game
commissioner, Sam Slate, declared
that the swamp abounds in a greater
variety of game than any other part of
the United States they have visited.
Even black beat- they found in abund¬
ance. said Mr. Slate. They reported
quail hunting better in Georgia than
anywhere else in the South.
Medal Presented Captain At Wheeler
Macon —While six thousand soldiers
stood at attention in a drizzling rain
a distinguished service cross was pre¬
sented to an officer at Camp Wheeler
for gallantry on the field of battle in
France. Afterward there was a re¬
view in his honor. Every man at
Camp Wheeler took part. Capt. Myron
: M. Anderson of West Hartford. Conn.,
j Is the hero. With unusual bravery and
j skill he threw his company in a breach
j near Soissons last July and, although
j shot and shell rained about them, they
! beat the Huns, covering an entire bat¬
I talion front.
I
Cherokee County Sued By Soldier
Atlanta.—A suit against Cherokee
county for $25,001) damages for injuries
sustained in the tragic accident last
June, in which three Camp Gordon sol
diers were killed and several sustain¬
ed severe injuries when an army
truck crashed through the floor of the
steel bridge over the Etowah river in
Cherokee county, was filed in the fed¬
j eral court by Corporal George W.
‘ Schmidt of Lake Charles. III., a mem¬
j ber of the military expedition which
j had started out on a search for de¬
serters in north Georgia.
Service Records To Be Kept.
Atlanta.—Maj. Joel B. Mallet, se¬
lective service officer for Georgia, has
announced that inasmuch as records
of the selective service system will
be primarily used in connection with
examinations affecting individual reg¬
istrants, each and every portion of
such records must be assembled at
the local board of origin. To accom¬
plish this end all files in the state
headquarters, district and medical le¬
gal advisory boards and government
appeal agents, must be carefully taken
apart and every record related to an
individual registrants returned to the
proper local board for filing in the
cover sheet of the registrants affected.
Major Mallet stated that the comple
tion of all files must proceed as rap
idly as possible and if any local board
lacked sufficient office force to accom
plish this task immediately, the state
headquarters will send limited service
selectmen upon request of such
boards. Major Mallet also informed
all local boards in the state that all
calls of induction into the navy are
cancelled, and no more competent or¬
ders are to be issued for the indue
tion of registrants into the navy or
marines.
Ware Farmers Store Cotton For Price
Waycross.—At a meeting of farm
era and business men, held here, a
report was made by the ways and
means committee of the Ware County
market bureau, showing complete ar
rangeraents for storing cotton upon
Which the banks will make loans to
farmers who need cash for paying
pressing obligations. This completes
all details in connection with the hold
ing of cotton for 35 cents by the farrn
era of this county. The next step is
to hold meetings in the several dis
tricts of the county, get the farmers
to join the organization and then pack
their cotton aside to await the 35-cent
market.
Many Officers To Hold Places
Camp Gordon.—The board of officers
recently appointed here to pass upon
applications of officers who desire per¬
manent commission in the United
States army, Issued a list of officers
recommended by the body to receive
permanent commissions. The recom¬
mendations of the board, based upon
physical and mental examinations of
the officers, will be presented to the
war department at Washington for
further action. All of the examina¬
tion papers, whether or not the offi¬
cer-subject was recommended for ap¬
pointment, will be reviewed by the
department.
Colleges Give Freely To Fund
Atlanta.—The colleges of Georgia
subscribed $115,196.87 to the united
war work campaign, according to an¬
nouncement made by Will R. McCord,
director of collections for Georgia. All
of the schools have not yet reported,
and the total amount will probably be
considerably swelled when all of the
reports are received. The University
of Georgia led the state with the
School of Technology a close second,
while Shorter College, Agnes Scott,
Georgia Military College and Brenau
College were bunched together in
amount of subscriptions to the cam¬
paign fund.
Brunswick Officer Wounded In Duel
Brunswick.—As the result of a pis
tol battle between police officers and
negroes who had been caught in a
gambling game, Police Officer Emmet
Smith is lying at the point of death
the city hospital, and ike Austin,
who shot him, is dead, while the po
live are making every effort to round
up a number of other negroes who
participated in the shooting.
Tobacco Warehouse For Fitzgerald
Fitzgerald.—Lon Dickey, president
of the Dickey Lumber company of
this city, announced that his compa
ny will immediately proceed with the
erection of a large tobacco warehouse
and that the company will go active
ly into the tobacco business, both as
planters on a large scale and as ware
housemen.
Extradition Warrant For Hancock Man
Atlanta.—Governor Dorsey at the
of Gov. Charles Whitman of
New York, issued an extradition war
rant for Louis Gotschel, alias Greenie
Yussel, a soldier at Camp Hancock,
who is wanted in New York on the
charge of having received stolen prop¬
erty. He is alleged to have had in
his possession a pearl necklace valued
at $22,000, the property of Otto D.
Wormser.
Funeral Of Jurist Largely Attended
Macon.—The funeral of Judge Em
ory Speer of the United States court
! for the southern district of Georgia,
; was largely attended here. There was
j an honorary escort from the Georgia
; Bar Association in attendance. Law¬
yers and judges from all parts of the
i state attended.
Body In River Mrs. Perrine’s
i Columbus.—That the body of the
woman found in the Chattahoochee
river, 200 miles below Columbus, was
that of Mrs. H. P. Perrine, wife of Ma¬
jor Perrine, U. S. A., of Fort Ben
ning, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Theophilus Allen, of Palo Alto, Cal.,
was established when Major Perrine
positively identified the body. The
verdict of the coroner’s jutj at Sneads,
Fla., near which place the body was
found, was that the deceased came
to her death by foul play at unknown
hands.
Net Contents 15 Fluid Drachn GAST 0 R 1 A
For Infants and Children,
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
.ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT Always
AVe^elablePrcparati^fAs] the Food
I m If tin^theStonwjjsa^^^^J s imitating Bears the
1 CHILPBF>
j IN FAN T*» Signature
1 f Thereby Promoting RestGortM^
i Cheerfulness and of
!
i quite
Jhnptin Sad
! in
| (hn/MSos mnt Sml
Mr
I Constipation AhclpfulRcmedyftf and Diarrhoe Use
* and Feverishness and
< i a l resulti Loss ng there OF fromu SLEEP nllllara of - For Over
j Facsimile S.^natwv
j j la* GEJrm'H Compaq. Thirty Years
\ of Wrapper. cmornu
Exact Copy tm* e«irr*u» aoMMNV, yen* errv.
Fall Run of Distemper
MAY BE WHOLLY AVOIDED BY USING
“^PflHN’S 99 results. A small It outlay Is sure of money cure and brings prefentWe very srreat if
a a
you use It as per directions. Simple, safe and sure. The large ilz*
is twice the quantity and an ounce more 'ban the small size. Get
your horses In best condition for late fall and winter. All drug¬
gists bairns# dealers or manufacturers
Spohn Medical Co. Goshen, Ind., U. S- A™
SOLD FOR 50 YEARS
For MALARIA,
CHILLS and
FEVER
Alto a Fine General
Strengthening Tonic.
SOLD BY ALL DRUG STORES*
Her Sacrifice.
! “Sistah Maudie Wabbles am puffin',
j and (flowin’ round dat she has done
; give her husband to Uo’p \yiu the
: war.”
1 “Husband—huh!” snorted .old Aunt
j Miasma. “Walt twell site gives a Son,
j a brwbler or somebody she keers sup
| pin' about!”—Kansas City Star.
No Worm* in a Healthy' Child
All children troubled .with worms have an tm*
: heal' thy color, which Indicate# poor blood, and as a
1 rale, OROVH GROVB , there ___ S TASTHLftSS is more or less stomach disturbance
chill TONIC glren regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im
prore pro the digestion, and act as a General Strenrth
ent; enlng Tonic ...... to the whole ' ' system. Nature Nature will will then then
throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be
in perfect health. Pleasant to take HOC per bottle
Between Friends.
“I’ve got half an idea,” bgnn Flub*
; dlib.
j posed “You are Skaggs/—Louisville progressing, old boy,” Courier- inter
:
Journal.
—---
FOR TOOTHACHE
Nothing gives quicker relief than
Vacher-Balm, it is harmless. 25c In
jars or tubes. Made by E W. Vaeher,
Inc., New Orleans, La. Adv.
What we are stretches past what
we do, beyond what we possess.
Acid-Stomach
Makes Millions
Suffer
achs—bloated, Indigestion—dyspepsia—sour stom¬ Take EATONIC and get rid of your
gassy stum achs—belchv, Acid-Stomach. This wonderful mod¬
miserable-feeling stomachs—these are ern remedy actually takes the excesa
Acid-Stomachs. acid out of the stomach. It quickly
What a lot of misery they cause! and positively relieves bloat, heart
How Acid-Stomach, with its dav- bum, belching, food repeating, sour,
after-dav sufferings, does take the joy gassy stomach, and the pains of indi¬
out of life! Not only that Acid- gestion. Makes the stomach cool
— and comfortable—keeps
Stomach is always undermining one's it sweet and
health. Think of what acid does to 6trong. Banishes ail stomach trou¬
the teeth—how the acid eats through bles so completely that you forget
the enamel, causing them to decay, you have a stomach. You can eat
is it any wonder, then, that Acid- what you like and digest your food
Stomach saps the strength of the in comfort, without fear of distressing
strongest bodies and wrecks the health after-effects. EATONIC helps you
of so many people? get full strength out of every mouthful
you eat—and that is what yoa must
You see ACID-STOMACH victims have to be well and strong — full
everywhere exactly alway* what ailing. They can’t strength from vour food.
tell is the matter; all Get a big box of EATONIC from
they say is, “I don't feel well”—‘‘I'm yonr druggist TODAY, We authorize
all "in; tired, sickly.” If they only him to guarantee EATONIC to please
knew it, nine times out of ten it is you. If it fails in any way, take it
Acid-Stomach It surely makes that good is digestion aiiing them. diffi¬ back; he will refund your monev. Ii
cult, food and fer¬ yourdruggist does notkeep EATONIC,
causes to sour write to us and we will send yon a big
ment in the bowels, weakens the 50c box. You can send us the 50c after
blood and fills the system with poi¬ vou receive it. Address H. L. Kramer,
sons, It prevents one from getting President, Eatonic Remedy Company,
the *F fall strength atonic out of their food. South Wabash, Chicago, 111.
T
o
D
E fh ^TFOR YOUR acid stomach )y )
Akin to His Profession.
‘J am told jrour family doctor is a
poet.”
“Why should he be? Isn’t poetry;
a drug in the market?”
Industry and prosperity are spelled
differently, but they mean about the
same thing.
1 1
Look out for Span¬
j j ish Influenza.
At the first sign of
a cold take
CASCARA A 0 QUININE
i
I Standard cold remedy for 20 year#—in tabiat
form—*afe, #ure, no opiate#-—breaks up a cold
in 24 hour#—relieves grip in 3 days. Money
back if It fail#. The genuine boa has a Red top
with Mr. Hill'# picture. At All Drug Stores.
,
I W. N. U.. ATLANTA NO. 52-1918.