Newspaper Page Text
NR A DECREASED
YIELD OF COTTON
■ANKERS, FARMER8 AND BUSI¬
NESS MEN UNITED FOR
DIVERSIFICATION
STATE NEWSjDF INTEREST
■rl«f New* Item* Of Importance Gath¬
ered From All Part*
. Of The Stat*
Atlanta.—The agitation for a re¬
duction in this year’s cotton acreage
and the continuance of the present
holding movement of cotton, is taking
root throughout Georgia. Meetings
have been held in practically every
section of the state for perfection of
trach plans and to carry out the reso¬
lutions adopted at the recent Macon
convention, which called for a reduc¬
tion of 33 1-3 per cent in this year’s
acreage, for the use of less fertilizer,
and for holders of spot cotton to stand
pat for not. less than 35 cents a pound.
The meetings were largely attended
by bankers, farmers and business men
with complete harmony and enthusi¬
asm characterizing them throughout.
A deft baa been hurled at the South
by speculative gamblers and consum¬
ing Interests and the challenge has
been fully accepted.
Phone Order Blow At State Right*
Atlanta.—Characterizing the action
of Postmaster General Burleson in in¬
creasing and fixing IntraRtate tele¬
phone rates as a stroke at the very
foundation of state sovereignty which
deprives the respective states of the
Union of the exercise of the police
power, which is lodged exclusively in
them, and not in the federal govern¬
ment, the Georgia railroad commission
made drastic protest to Postmaster
General Burleson against, the power
he has assumed. The commission also
expressed the hope that Mr. Burle¬
son would not further exercise the
authority that lie now exercises, be¬
lieving that such action on his part
is a dangerous usurpation and fur¬
ther stated that "we view with appre¬
hension the infringement of the po¬
lice powers of the states by the fed¬
eral government, under a democratic
administration.”
State Editors In Ad Campaign
Atlanta.—Editors of the weekly
papers of Georgia, and those of the
smaller dallies are determined to go
out after big national advertising and
get It, instead of waiting for it to be
sent to them, they indicated, at a con
Jeremse held here. The meeting re¬
sulted in the organization of the Se¬
lect Newspapers Association of Geor¬
gia, with O. W. Pahsavant of Newnan
as president; A. A. Brumby of Mari
ett as vice president; Gordon Chap¬
man of Sandersville, secretary-treasu¬
rer, and J. Kelly Simmons of McRae,
Ernest Camp of Monroe and Isadora
Colders of Fitzgerald, directors. Paul
l-Iarber, president of the Georgia
Press Association, had called the
meeeting at, the request of a number
of Georgia editors, and was nominat¬
ed for the president of the new organ¬
ization, which is to be auxiliary to
the old body, though not limited to
members of the parent association.
League To Have Great Speakers
Atlanta,—The most imposing list of
speakers that, have ever witnessed a
single conference in the South will
be presented by the Southern Con¬
gress of the League of Nations, which
is to be held in Atlanta on February
28 and March 1. Headed by ex-Presi
dont William Howard Taft, the pres¬
ident of the League to Enforce Peace,
the speakers’ program will include di¬
plomats, statesmen, leaders in relig¬
ion, labor, rural life and woman’s
work. There will bo three sessions
each day at the mammoth auditorium
armory, each session being open to
the public as well as to the four thou¬
sand delegates which are expected to
be present from eight Southern states.
Each session will be devoted to some
special phase of the league of nations
problems as it affects the various
classes of the population.
Stores Burned In LaFayette Fire
LaFa.vette.—Fire early in the morn¬
ing destroyed the store of T. J. Nash,
also that occupied by Fox Brothers.
Nothing was saved of the entire stock.
A high wind was blowing, and it seem¬
ed for a time that the entire block
would be burned, but heroic work sav¬
ed adjoining buildings.
State Gets Government Check
Atlanta.—The state of Georgia has
received from the federal government
a check for $3,184.82 to reimburse the
slate for paying the electric light bills
of Georgia National Guardsmen on
the Mexican border in 1310.
Georgia Cities Get Building Funds
Atlanta.—Georgia cities included in
the public buildings bill introduced in
the house of congress and the sums
carried for each are: Savannah $650,
000, Monroe $40,000. Rossville $50,000,
Winder $5,000, Thomaston, $5,000.
Shasta $5,000. Miller $5,000. Jesup $5,
000, Macon $180,000, Dawson $5,000,
West Point $18,000, Sandersville $30.
000, Fort Valley $50,000. Waynesboro
$40,000, Ashburn $5.1*00, Baxley $5,000.
Cairo $6,000, Blakely $6,000, Commeice
85,000. Haw'kinsvIUe $S,000 and Jack
son $5,000.
$7,000,000 For Georgia Road*
Atlanta.-—-Under the senate amend¬
ment to the poatoffice appropriation
bill, Georgia will get approximately $7,
000,000 for good roads for the current
and the next two fiscal years. Fortun
ately for the state, the senate reversed
Itself and struck finally from the bill
its amendment to prevent payment of
federal road funds to any state em¬
ploying convict labor on its highways.
This amendment got into the bill while
a desultory debate was under way in
committee of the whole. As Georgia
uses about four thousand convicts on
her roads the state would have been
compelled practically to give us use
of its convicts or lose its share ia the
federal appropriation for roads. Cir¬
culating among senators from states
employing convict labor on the roads,
Senator Smith mustered a number of
votes against the amendment, origi¬
nally offered by Senator Kirby of Ar¬
kansas and. on reconsideration, the
senate struck the amendment from the
bill. Georgia came near losing its in¬
terest in the federal appropriation be¬
cause of the convict labor rider. The
state may now receive its federal ap¬
propriation and also continue to use
its convicts.
Extra Session Urged By Many
Atlanta.—So many boards of trade,
chambers of commerce and other bod¬
ies interested in the development of
Georgia have adopted resolutions urg¬
ing an extra session of the legislature
for passing good roads legislation, that
Governor Dorsey has indicated his will¬
ingness to give the subject careful con¬
sideration. It is expected that the re¬
port of the special legislative commit¬
tee appointed by the governor to draft
a state highway law will urge, at its
meeting on February 25, that the gov¬
ernor issue a call for the extra ses¬
sion, to be held in the early spring.
Walks 300 Miles To Rejoin "Gang”
Moultrie.—Jack Boutwell, white life
timer, who escaped from the Colquitt
county jail about three months ago,
has returned to Moultrie and surren¬
dered, explaining that a berth on the
chaingang was much more desirable
than always expecting to be placed
under arrest. When he decided to
surrender, Bothwell said that he was
300 miles from Moultrie, and declared
that he had walked this entire dis¬
tance to give himself up.
Country Stores Robbed
Moultrie.—Burglars which seem to
specialize on country stores entered
the place of business of W. J. Whit¬
field at Funston and stole a large quan¬
tity of merchandise. Apparently the
f,hl©ves carried away their booty in a
two-horse wagon, or an automobile
truck. Several similar robberies have
occurred in this believed section recently and
all of them are to have been
the work of the i _LZ_ nAme s&me gang. g
200 Savannah Trolley Tnslley Workers ' Strike
Savananh.—-Conductors and motor
men of the Savannah Electric compa¬
ny, about 200 in number, struck. The
carmen claim that the company has
refused to receive a committee of the
Savannah Trades and Labor assem¬
bly. R. G. Carroll, acting manager of
the company, stated that the carmen
had presented to the company a con¬
tract. that he could not accede to.
Rome Man To Aid Air Flight
Rome.—Commander John H. Tow¬
ers, formerly of Rome, has been re¬
lieved from duty with the naval bureau
of operations, and has been detailed
by the secretary of the navy to assist
in formulating plans for the first trans
Atlantic flight in an airplane, accord- i
ton. iug to advices received from Washing¬
May Convicted; Gets Eighteen Years
Bainbridge.—The jury in the case
of H. H. May, charged with murder,
brought in a verdict of manslaughter.
May, who formerly was cashier of the
Citizens’ Bank of Bainbridge, was tried
on a charge of murder of H S. Rich¬
ardson, an architect and contractor.
Judge Harrell sentenced May to servo
eighteen years in the penitentiary.
New Hotel For Augusta
Augusta.—A new 100-room hotel
next to the Union Station, involving
improvements costing $60,000; a new
clothing house on Broad street, cost¬
ing $30,000, and a new garage, cost¬
ing $50,000, are principal items in con¬
struction announcements in a large
amount which were announced in Au¬
gusta.
State Fair Lost Money
Macon.—The 191$ Georgia State
fair sustained a loss of $S,000, accord¬
ing to officials of the association, and
this will have to be made good by the
business men of Macon before another
fair is held.
Seaboard Fire Loss $1,500,000
Savannah.—W. J. Harahan, federal
manager of the Seaboard Air Line
railroad, who was in Savannah, gave
out a statement that the road’s losses
in the fire recently will not exceed a
million and a half dollars.
Military Trial For George Crawley
Atlanta.—Following a conference
between the district attorney and
Glenn Young, the captor of George and
Decatur Crawley and Blaine Stewart,
j iv hiy was taken single-handed about
‘ fifteen miles from Alcoa, Tenn., and
1 vbout forty-five miles from Knoxville,
j it was decided that George Crawley
; be delivered to the military authori-
1 ties to be tried on the charge of de
j serting from the army and for the mur
j tier of United States Marshal Bfn
| F. Dixon, which occurred in Union
j county.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND. GEORGIA.
MTTEB .y.
> vUUll ilUMAUn rnu ,ri|
i
Pills and Strong Medicines Made
This Lady’s Troubles Worse,
But Thedford’s Black-Draught
Improved Her Appetite and
Took Away Her Bile.
Nancy, Ky.—-Mrs. Cora Waddle, a
resident of this place, gives out this
statement: “I have taken Black
Draught and found it to be the best
liver medicine I ever used. It has
just been fine for indigestion, sour
stomach and a bitter taste In the
mouth.
I used to get bilious and constipated
and had to take something. Pills and
other strong medicines would only tear
my stomach up and leave me in a
worse fix than before taking. I began
to have sick headache.
After learning of Black-Draught I
took it and was cured of sick head¬
aches. One or two doses a week, or a
pinch after meals, kept the bowels
open and took away all bile. I have a
good appetite, due to my use of Black
Draught.”
If your liver Is not acting properly
you may suffer from such symptoms
as headache, biliousness, constipation,
indigestion, etc., and unless relief Is
obtained serious trouble may result.
In Its 70 years of successful use,
Thedford’s Black-Draught has been
found to relieve these aliments and
stimulate the liver to do Its work.
At all druggists.—-Adv.
Italian Irredentist.
The Irredentist party was formed In
Italy abofft 1878 to secure the Incor¬
poration with that country of regions
Italian in speech and race, notably the
people of the district around Trieste
and Trent In Austria, Nice In France,
Corsica and Malta, but subject to oth¬
er governments. Such regions are
called Italia irredenta, or "Unredeemed
Italy.” Of late years Italia Irredenta
has been considered' to comprise the
provinces held by Austria, which have
already been won brilliantly by the
Italian and allied armies, and will cer¬
tainly never go back to the old dual
monarchy of Austria.
_ Examine Important to Mothers
carefully every bottle of
CASTOEIA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 tears.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Cuzioria
What They Say.
She—A well-educated persou never
says “I’ll bet.”
He—You bet they don’t.
Avoid Trouble at |
Teething Time
by giving baby
MRS.
WINSLOW’S
SYRUP
Ti# Infant*’ and Children’t Retalator
By causing the stomach to
digest food as it should, keeping
the bowels open and by giving
baby less food, the first teeth
never cause trouble.
Contains no harmful ingredients
—formula on every bottle. Use it
and note how easy and comfort¬
able baby is when teeth come.
At all druggiata.
©niLL%)MDC i
Sold for 50 Tear*. FOR PJdMlk, CHILLS AND FEVER.
Al $9 o Fir? Generil Streaftkeniug Teaic. At All Bra* St*m.
, HAIR PARKER’S
BALSAM
A toilot preparation of merit.
Helps For to erfcdic&te dandruff.
*51 Beauty Restoring: Color and
50c. toGray or Faded Hair.
and f LOO at Druggists.
DROPSY lafitwl W* SotVB TREATMENT. *wpIHnfr Giro* quiet anil renet ahnrf
lYm.wes
Write to Ofl. THOMAS E. CREEP!
Bank Boa 20 . CHATS WORTH, ft A,
Do. Quick seller, coi __________
about selliRg 15 required. instructions We furnish Information full m&nui'acturiRs
and free. Tex
Mex Specially Co., 1104 Lrtadaiupe St, Laredo,Tex
Wnk | v Health laths
GOING GOING RACK BACK TO TO NATI NATURE IRF.
BY DR. W. LUCAS.
People get sick because they go
away from Nature? and the only way
to get well is to go back. Something
grows out of the ground in the form
of vegetation to cure aimost every 111.
Some of these vegetable growths are
understood by man, and some are not.
Animals, It would seem, know what to
do when they are sick better than
men and women. Observers have
noted that a sick horse, dog or cat
will stop eating food and seek out
some vegetable growth in the field or
yard, which, when found and eaten,
often restores appetite and health,
Haven’t you seen these animals do
this very thing yourself 7
Dr. Pierce, if Buffalo, N. Y., long since
found the herb3 and roots provided by
Nature to overcome constipation, and he
had these vegetables collected and made
up of Mayapple, leaves of Aloe, root oi
Jalap, into little white sugar-coated pills,
that he called Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets.
You must understand that when your in¬
testines are stopped up, poisons and de¬
cayed matter are imprisoned in your sys¬
tem, and these are carried by the blood
throughout your body. Thus does your
head ache, you get dizzy, you can’t sleep,
your skin may break out, your appetite de¬
clines, you get tired and despondent. As
a matter of fact, you may get sick all
over. Don’t you see how,useless all this
suffering is? All that is often needed is
a few of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets,
which he has placed in all drug stores for
your convenience and health. Try them
by all means. They are probably the very
thing you need right now.
Quite So.
‘‘Why is a married man like an um¬
brella?”
“I suppose it is because he is al¬
ways being shut up when he is in the
house.”
Children tell everything they know,
but there are old folks who have never
outgrown the habit.
OBOVBS tbs Stomach B^YBOW l 9L I MaDfamf ; »lU some*
leee ana Howe) trouble!. Perfectly barm
Bee direction* on the bottle.
Far-sightedness is largely a matter
of careful planning.
Don’t trifle with a cold
—it’s dangerous.
You can’t afford to risk
Influenza.
Keep always at hand a
box of
K; pUININE
Standard cold remedy for JO year*—to tablet
form—aafe, in tore, no opiate!—break! up a cold
24 hour*—relieve! grip in 3 day*. Money
back with if Mr. it fail*. Hill’* The genuine box has a Red top
picture. At All Drug Storea.
Gratifying Relief
InflamedEyes
/ granulated eye tids—styes.
r etc., has been experienced thetr by
thousands who Tame eye¬
sight. Never take chances with
powerful pow____ simple—dependable—absolutely _ drug ____ “drops” * but use
that hat simple—de
■ ■ safe tmic remedy. remedy. Pr Prwt i The. &*Ld hi *11 drv*
I 9 i»t»,orbir --- MITCHELL
I HALL ft l
215 Wash!i eye SALVE
| New
Send 2c stamp for
illustrated Winsor &
Newton catalogue of ;
Artists’ Materials and ;
Colors, including Special !
Chart for mixing, FREE, a
most valuable aid. Gives
explicit directions for right
colors for all subjects and how to mix.
American Blue Print Co., Inc.
E. 42nd Special Agents New York City
SO St
MAKE YOUR HAIR GROW
SEND FOR SAMPLE
Successful Scientific Treatment
wait-giving Try a sample hair of Calvacara, It the wonderful oew
grower. It should benefit proves successful *
i so many cases you. Do yon
suffer from dandruff, falling hair,Itching hair, prematurely gray
hair, stripy or matted or ecsema or the
scalp, makes are you bald headed or nearly ao? Delay
only for yourself that It worse. Try benefited. Cahacurs Hundreds now See of
pleased you are and white
customers, men women, and col¬
ored. successfully use Caivacurn. Then why
not yon? in few Does days. no harm Send 10 and a new silver growth often
starts a cents, or stamps, sample.
as evidence of good faith, for convincing
Send today. Colon Laboratory, Dept. 22S8, Bioghaatoa, a Y,
Make $10 Every
selling Rawleigh’s Products, with rig in
country. Few good territories now open,
Give age, occupation, references. W. T.
RawleighCa., 130 Illinois St., Memphis, Tea*.
WEAK LUNGS
Have you weak lungs or tubercu¬
losis? If so try
“RECO LUNG BALSAM”
THE RECO REMEDY CO.
40 DOUGLASS BLDG COLUMBUS, OHIO
Cabbage Plants
Genuine Frostproof, all varieties,immedi¬
ate and future shipment By express—500,
$1.25; 1000, $2.00; 5000, $8.75. Parcel Post
Prepaid—100, 35c; 500, $1.50; 1000, $2.50.
Enterprise Co. Inc., Sumter. S. r
II. S. TROOPS TO
RUSSIA
PLANS ARE MADE FOR WITH¬
DRAWAL IN EARLY
SPRING
RAIL UNITS FOR ARCHANGEL
These Unit* Will Improve Lines Of
Communication To Facilitate
Withdrawal
Washington.—American and allied
troops operating in north Russia will
be withdrawn at “the earliest possible
moment that weather conditions in the
spring will permit.” To facilitate this
movement and to improve lines of
communication for the supplying of
the forces that have penetrated into
the country President Wilson has ap¬
proved the sending of two additional
companies of American railway troops
to Archangel.
This information, cabled to the war
department by General Tasker H. Bliss
at Paris by direction of the president,
was transmitted to Chairmen Cham¬
berlain and Dent of the senate and
house military committees, by Secre¬
tary Baker. The announcement
brought expressions of approval from
several senators, including Senator
Johnson of California. Republican, who
has been pressing his resolution pro¬
viding for a declaration by the senate
in favor of withdrawal of the Ameri¬
can foi-ces.
General Bliss also informed Secre¬
tary Baker that Great Britain had de¬
cided to send twenty-four hundred ad¬
ditional soldiers to Archangel to re¬
inforce the army in north Russia. In
this connection General Bliss said the
British military authorities felt no ap¬
prehension over the military situa¬
tion in north Russia.
PICKING THE MEN
TO PASS ON PRICES
Redfield Is Organizing Post-War
Price-Fixing Board—Secretary Ex¬
plains What Will Be Done.
Washington.—The first, step toward
setting up the price conference com¬
mission approved by President Wil¬
son to suggest prices which the gov¬
ernment will pay for principal com¬
modities during the post-war read¬
justment period, was taken by Secre¬
tary Redfield with the appointment of
W. M. Ritter, formerly head of the
hardwood lumber section of the war
industries board, to supervise organ¬
isation and executive worker. Six
members will make up tint commis¬
sion, one of whom will be named by
ihe railroad administration and the
complete personnel will be announced
this week.
Secretary Redfield criticised pub¬
lished comments on the plan, and de¬
clared specifically that neither price
fixing nor price-maintenance was con¬
templated by the government or the
industrial leaders who devised the
arrangement. for suggesting com¬
modity prices at a level on which the
consumer is expected to buy.
CONGRESS HAS ENTERED
THE FINAL FORTNIGHT
OF SlXTY-FIFTH SESSION
Early Extra Session Believed To Be
Inevitable—Night Sessions Of
House Ordered
Washington.—The Sixty-fifth con¬
gress has entered upon the final fort¬
night of its existence with hope of
passing all of the almost unprecedent¬
ed mass of pending legislation virtu¬
ally abandoned by most leaders. Night
sessions of the senate and house until
March 4 have been ordered, but the
belief is growing that an early extra
session of the new congress will be
necessary for the enactment of some
of the annual appropriation measures.
Stupendous Debt Piled On Germany
Weimar.—The German people gen¬
erally do not yet understand clearly
ihe financial situation in which the war
has left them and they are too optimis¬
tic, declared Doctor Sehiffer, the min¬
ister of finance, addressing the Ger¬
man national assembly. He appar¬
ently astonished the house when he
gave the statistics to show that the
war had cost one hundred and sixty
one billion marks.
U. S. Bluejackets Marry Turk Women
New York.—Eighteen of the fifty-six
members of the crew of the United
States gunboat Scorpion, interned at
Constantinople, from April 11, 1917, un¬
til last November, married Turkish
women, and have been left behind
there, according to Lieut. Commander
Herbert S. Babbitt of Houghton, N. Y„
former commander of the Scorpion,
who arrived here with forty other
members of the gunboat’s crew on the
Italian steamer Dante Alighieri. A new
crew was sent to relieve the interned
men.
Wage Increase Given Packing, House
Chicago—Packing house employees
were given a 10 per cent advance by
the decision of the arbitrator, Judge
Alschuler. who announced the award
here. The advance is retroactive to
November 10. In addition, the award
grants 2cents an hour raise to all
workers under twenty-one years of
age. whose earnings are less than
42% cents an hour. Time and a half
is given for overtime, with double
time in certain instances. Overtime
begins after eight hours
MODERN B
Violent Purgatives Like Calomel
and Castor Oil Not Neces¬
sary to Regulate Liver
. and Cleanse Intes¬
tinal Tract.
In these brighter days of modern medi¬
cation. it is harmful to dose yourself with
calomel, castor oil and other violent pur¬
gatives. Calomel is poisonous. Castor
oil, taken as a physic, is really a prolific
cause of constipation, physicians say, and
produces binding after-effects which have
to be nullified with other medicine.
According to advaced ideas, one of the
most satisfying laxatives and liver-regu¬
lating substitutes for calomel and castor
oil is a lemon elixir compounded from a
prescription the late Dr. H. Mozley used
to give his patients in cases of severe
colds, fevers, grippe, influenza, malaria,
sick headache, indigestion and other stom¬
achic and bowel disturbances. This pre¬
scription is available in a proprietary
medicine labeled Dr. H. Mozley’s Lemon
Elixir. For forty-seven years it has
been a valued home remedy. Thousands
of families feel that the health of the
household, from the baby to the grand¬
parents, depends upon a spoonful occa¬
sionally of this excellent medicine. It is
pleasant to take. Causes no griping. will
Causes no drug-forming habits. It
ward off a cold or attack of "flu” by
cleansing the body of impurities that
make the system a breeding place for
disease germs. Get a trial bottle from
your druggist. Positively refuse any sub¬
stitute. There is nothing like' Dr. H.
Mozley’s Lemon Elixir—nothing so good
to maintain your health.—Adv.
Physicians Paid to Listen.
We are often misled by our patient’s
interpretation of his own case. In
other words, we are human and sub¬
ject to the power of suggestion. Often
we are informed that they are suffer¬
ing from heart disease, kidney or liver
disease or appendicitis, and we listen
to the story and become hynotized our
gelves and follow along the line of the
patient’s suggestions. They are anx¬
ious to tell somebody their symptoms,
and if we are good listeners they are
willing to pay us for our trouble and
time for listening.—President’s Ad¬
dress, Minnesota State Medical So*
ciety.
Every Little Task a Barden?
“EwryPWirr. To the women
Musin'’' worn-out with weak
kidneys, heavy burden. housework Back¬ ia
a
ache, sick headaches,
nervousness, d i z z i
ness, "blue” spells
and a weak, tired
simplest condition, make diffi¬ the
tasks
cult and the ever¬
present the daily weakened duties
give kidneys
no time to
recover. Use Doan's
have brought relief Kidney and Pills. comfort They
to
thousands of weak, suffering women.
A Georgia Case
Mrs. Bertie Waits. 180 Barnesville 6t..
Thomaston. Ga,, says: “Kidney trouble
and rheumatic pains made me miser¬
able. My back was so lame and weak
I could hardly go and sharp, cutting
pains would dart up and down my
back. My kidneys didn’t act as they
should and different remedies failed
to ney help Pills me. and I they finally quickly used Doan's to Kid¬ the
went
seat of the trouble and cured me.”
Get Doan’i at Any Store, 60c a Bo*
DOAN'S 8 '^
FOSTER.M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO. N.Y.
Georgia DIPLOMA
Alabama MEANS
1-* Business UFE
College _ EMPLOYMENT
Macon, Ga.
WRITE FOR CATALOQ
FROST PROOF
Cabbage Planfs
Early Jersey a,nd Charleston Wakefield, $1.35; Suc¬
cession and Flat Dutch. By express, 500,
1,000, 12.00; 5,000 at $1.75; 10,000 and up at $1.50,
F. O, B. here. By Parcel Post, prepaid, 100, 35c;
500, $1.50; 1,000,12.50. Wholesale and retail.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C.
Clipped Army Horses
Veterinarians of the Allied Armies ordered regular
clipping the service. of the They horses and clipped mules in with all branches of
were the Stewart
No. 1 Machine. YOUR horses also will do bette*
CHICAGO FLEXIBLE SHAFT COMPANY
Dept. A 17a, 12th Street and Central Ave., Chicago, HI.
FROST PROOF
CABBAGE PLANTS
READY
Shipping Now. We grow our own plants andean
fill orders at once. 1,000, $2.50; 500, $1.50; 100, 50c.
Leading Leading Varieties. Varieties. AH delivered.
YOUNG PLANT CO. Thoinasville, Ga*
North Carolina Cotton
Seed for Planting
KING’S Early Improved, known all over the
south as the earliest and most prolific. $uQG
bags of 100 pounds.
JNO. W. KING, Iionisbnrg, N. C.
Franklin County, Home of King's Improved Seed
Stop Your Coughing
No need to let that cough persist Stop the
frritatioo, and remove tickling and hoarse¬
ness by soothing the inflamed throat with
PISO’S