Newspaper Page Text
HOW MRS. BOYD
AVOIDED AN
.OPERATION
Canton, Ohio.—"I goffered from a
(•male trouble which caused me much
suffering, doctors decided and two
that 1 would have
operation to go through before an
i
could get well
had "My been mother, helped who
Lydia E. Pinkham'i by
pound, Vegetable advised Com¬
me
to try it before sub¬
mitting tion. It to relieved an opera¬
me
from my troubles
so I can do my house work without any
difficulty. I advise any woman who u
afflicted with female troubles to give
Lydia pound E. trial Pinkham'a and it will Vegetable do much Com¬
a as for
them.”—-Mrs. Mabie Boyd, 1421 6th
St, Sometimes N. E., Canton, there Ohio.
are serious condi¬
tions where a hospital operation is the
only alternative, but on the other hand
so many women have been cured bv this
famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E.
doctors Pinkham’s have Vegetable said that Compound, operation after
an was
necessary —every woman who wants
to avoid an operation should give it a
fair trial before submitting to such a
trying ordeal.
El If PinkhamMedicine complications exist, write to Mass., Lydia
for advice. The Co., Lynn,
result of many years
experience is at your service.
Hayes’
Healing Honey
mmmmmmJLmrn Stops The Tickle
Heals The Throat
Cares The Cough
Its Soothing Healing Effect soon
gives relief.
If the Cough is deep-seated and the Head
or Chest is sore, a penetrating salve should
be applied. This greatly helps Colds. any cougb
syrup In curing Coughs and
A FREE BOX OF
GROVE’S
O-PEN-TRATE SALVE
(Opens the Pores and Penetrates J
For Chest Gelds, Head Colds, and Creep,
Is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES'
HEALING HONEY. This is the only
cough syrup on the market with which
this additional treatment is given. The
salve is also very valuable as a Germicide
for the Nose and Throat You get both
remedies for the price of one. 35c.
Sold by all Druggists. It If your Druggist
should not have in stock, he will ordei
it from bis nearest Wholesale Druggist
Made, Recommended and Guaranteed tc
the Public
by PARIS MEDICINE COMPANY,
MANUFACTURERS OF
drove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
Lightning Tree Killer
Kills quickly all trees, live stumps,
sprouts and shoots. Kills entire root
system and hastens decay. Inexpen¬
sive. Easily applied. Affords wonder¬
ful results in land clearing. New
ground prepared in spring grows crops
same year. Exterminates sassafras,
pine, gum, oak and soil. persimmon sprouts.
Harmless to the Trial shipments
—one gallon, $1.85, two gallons, $3.50.
Sales agents wanted in every vicinity.
Correspondence with dealers solicited.
Full particulars free. Address our
nearest office.
LIGHTNING CHEMICAL CO., Inc.
1739 N. Broadway . . St, Louu, Mo.
1013 Hazel St. • Texarkana, Ark. -Tex.
S10 Carondelet St. • • New Orieana, La.
Send 2c. stamp for
illustrated Winsor &
Newton catalogue of
aBKW y Artists’ Materials and
T®? iOColors, 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.
30 E. 42nd . St Special Agent*
New York City
Are your
Eyes Sore
or painful eauaea? from Avoid alkali "dropp irritat
•r other
Otrong drurfv in them or U
chances with Tour »>eht. An
reliable-- simple aafe relief remedy is
bring* comforting Salve.
Use Mitchell Eyt
PrieatS Sold bp all sYvgpufs ’
cent*.
—or by mau from W
■aOABaeUI, •« Washing*** *.!•
Mitchell Eye Salve
Irritating Coughs
Promptly treat coughs, inflamed colds, hoarseness,
bronchitis and, similar and irritated
conditions of the throat with a tested remedy
PISO’S
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CL AND. GEORGIA
LABOR S AIMS ME
ENDORSED BY TAFT
,HE ADVOCATES POLICY OF TOL¬
ERANCE BETWEEN WORKER
AND EMPLOYER
STATE NEWSJF INTEREST
Brief Nsws Items Of Importance Gath¬
ered From All Parts
Of The State
Atlanta.—William Howard Taft’s
hearty indorsement, of organized la¬
bor and his advocacy of the establish¬
ment of a policy of tolerance on the
part of both employer and employee,
marked by the closing session of the
Southern Congress of the League of
Nations at the Auditorium. Mr. Taft
declared the plans for establishment
of a League of Nations has the hearty
indorsement of organized labor of
America and added further that such
union is the promise made by the unit¬
ed workmen of this country to their
brothers in Europe. Unions should
be encouraged, he said, and employ¬
ers should deal with their workers
through the unions. By encouraging
the unions to voice the sentiment of
the workers, the latter Will be given a
deeper and more serious conscious¬
ness of the part they have played and
are playing in the wotjjjjts affairs. Mr.
Taft said the establishment of such a
feeling would do more toward break¬
ing down the wave of discontent and
Bolshevism now spreading over the
country than anything else possibly
could do.
Changes Urged In Auto Law
Atlanta.—A number of recommenda¬
tions of interest to automobile owners
in the slate are made to Governor Dor¬
sey in the annual report of Henry B.
Strange, secretary of state, to be sub¬
mitted to the governor. The most im¬
portant change recommended by Mr.
Strange is the establishment of a sep¬
arate and distinct department for the
registration of motor vehicles. It is
submitted that the registering of au¬
tomobiles, trucks and the like has
become a business of such volume that
the office of the secretary of state is
not equipped to handle it and that
the creation of another department for
this purpose is not only justifiable, but
necessary. In this connection, Mr.
Strange suggests that the license fees
for registration of motor vehicles be
increased to $5, $8 and $10, accord¬
ing to the horsepower, and the fees
arising therefrom be used exclusively
i or good roads “purposes.
Tractors Arriving For Show In Macon
Macon.—Scores of farm machinery
and implements are beginning to ar¬
rive here for the Dixie National Power
Farming demonstration which is to be
held here during the week of March 10
to 15. Manufacturers from all parts
of the United States have their ad¬
vance men already on the field and
many of the presidents of these com¬
panies are to be here to personally
watch the demonstrations. A tract of
2,500 acres of land a short distance
south of this city, reached by two rail¬
roads and two highways, has been ob¬
tained for the demonstration. Gov.
Hugh M. Dorsey has accepted an invi¬
tation to officially start the tractors.
One Killed; Two Hurt
Atlanta.—Dr. E. L. Griffin, a well
known Atlanta physician, is dead; As¬
sistant Fire Chief Henry P. Pressley
is painfully injured, and his drived,
J. K. Castleberry, of the fire headquar¬
ters, is suffering front bruises about
the face and body, as the result of an
automobile collision at the intersec¬
tion of Hill and East Hunter streets.
According to several eyewitnesses,
both cars were traveling at a good
rate of speed, and when the crash came
the wheels of the small touring car
of Doctor Griffin locked with those of
the big red car of the chief, the im¬
pact throwing the physician through
the windshield.
Fleeing County Official Caught
Washington.—'T. Souths Young, for¬
mer clerk to the board of commission¬
ers of Wilkes county, who was found
5,000 short in his accounts last April,
has been apprehended on a Texas
ranch. Telegrams that passed be¬
tween Sheriff Callaway of this county
and the sheriff of Dallas county. Tex¬
as, established the identity of Young,
who is in jail, awaiting the arrival of
local officials, having waived requisi¬
tion.
Waycross Has Clean-Up Week
Way cross,—The Waycross health
league has appointed the week begin¬
ning March 30 as clean-up week for
Waycross. They propose to make
Waycross a clean city by eradicating
flies, mosquitoes, rats, mice, bugs,
worms and all other pestiferous in¬
sects and animals.
Slayer Of Hickman Exonerated
Brunswick.—G. A. Black, who ac¬
knowledged that he delivered the blow
which produced the death of J W.
Hickman, who died in an Atlanta hos¬
pital shortly after his arrival in that
city, has been exonerated, a prelimi¬
nary hearing having been given the ac¬
cused man in the justice court. Black
surrendered to officers as soon as it
became known that Hickman had
passed away in Atlanta, stating that
he delivered the blow in self-defense.
His plea of self-defense was substan¬
tiated.
82d Will Soon Be On Way Home
Atlanta.—That the eighty-second di¬
vision, trained at Camp Gordon, and
for many months prior to the signing
of the armistice in the thick of fierce
fighting in France, will embark for
America about March 1, is indicated
in special orders issued to headquar¬
ters of the division and in letters from
members of its units to friends in At¬
lanta. The division was ordered to
move about February 7 from the tenth
training area to the Le Mans area,
reporting upon arrival to the command¬
ing general, embarkation center, for
preparation to leave for home. The di¬
vision will remain at Le Mans until
March 1, being subject to release by
the commanding general after that
date. The commanding general will
issue orders relative to preparation for
movement and disposition of material
and animals.
Large Crowds Attend Peace League
Atlanta.—Ex - President William
Howard Taft, the leading exponent of
Woodrow Wilson's program for a
league of nations, came to Atlanta
and presided over the six sessions of
the Southern Congress of the League
of Nations, which met at the Audito¬
rium-Armory.
Mr. Taft brought with him a mes¬
sage that is arousing the people of
America to the urgent need of such
a league in the world today. He ut¬
tered in the course of his addresses
while in this city words that will ring
around the nation; words of rebuttal
to the opponents of President Wil¬
son’s plan that he lias brought back
from the Versailles conference; words
that aroused his audiences to a keener
sense than ever of the responsbility
of every American citizen to give per¬
sonal expression to his belief in
the league of nations and to exert
his whole influence in gathering the
movement.
Purebred Stock Movement Grows
Valdosta.—The' Georgia Purebred
Sire Club, an organization fostered by
the State College of Agriculture, to
promote the growing of improved cat¬
tle and hogs, is being joined by a
large proportion of the farmers and
stockgrowers in Lowndes county.
Specialists C. A. Martini, R. M. Gird
ley and W. R. Nesbit, of Athens; A,
J. Clarke, sanitary expert, of Athens,
and County Agent W. S. Brooks, of
Lowndes county, are holding meetings
in the various districts of the county,
demonstrating the advantages in grow¬
ing purebred animals. About twenty
stock-raisers have joined the club at
the meeting and many more are ex¬
pected to join.
Work Begins On New Power Dam
Albany.—It Is anticipated that con¬
struction wprk will begin the course
of the next few weeks on tile dafifo!
the Georgia-Alabama Power company
on Flint river, two miles above Albany.
The deal by which this site, formerly
owned by the Albany Powder and Man¬
ufacturing company, passed to the
Georgia-Alabama concern has now
been fully consummated.
Wins West Point Place
Barnesville.—Powell Daniel Bush,
son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bush, of this
city, has just been given an appoint¬
ment to West Point Military Academy
by Congressman J. W. Wise, He will
stand an examination in March for en¬
trance in June. He is at present at
ihe University of Geo^.a, and has a
brother, Gale Bush, with the Ameri¬
can forces in France.
Hurley Requests Help Of Governor
Atlanta—Gov. Hugh Dorsey has re¬
ceived a telegram from Edward N.
Hurley, chairman of the United States
shipping board, in regard to the co¬
operation which the city and state is
expected to give the board in the es¬
tablishment of shipping basis to take
care of the enormous trade with for¬
eign countries which peace conditions
are demanding.
Baptist Convention Gets Institute
Moultrie.—Norman institute, at Nor¬
man Park, and all of its property, which
includes the leading hotel of Moultrie
and the water and light plant at Nor¬
man Park, has been transferred to the
Georgia Baptist convention. The trans¬
fer was made at a meeting of the
board of trustees of the school and
representatives of the Georgia Baptist
convention which was held here.
Lion Rips Off Woman’s Arm
Moultrie.—Mrs. Dollie Castle of Chi¬
cago, lion trainer for a show winter¬
ing in Moultrie, was attacked by a
lion, which almost tore her right arm
from her shoulder. It was her first
day with the show. The former lion
trainer was a man, and Mrs. Castle
is the first woman that ever entered
the cage.
Americus Plans To Organize Aero
Americus.—A call has been issued
to the business and professional men
of Americus to meet for the purpose
of organizing the Aero Club of Amer
ieus. Interest in aviation has been
greatly stimulated here by the loca¬
tion nearby of Souther field, .
Georgia Gets No Cash For P. O's
Atlanta.—The rules committee of the
national house has refused to pla'ce
the public buildings and grounds, ap¬
propriation bill in the calendar for
this session. That means that no ap¬
propriations for postoffice buildings in
Georgia will be made until a similar
bill comes up in the Sixty-sixth con¬
gress. The bill which dies without
consideration carries twenty-one items
for Georgia, among them one hundred
thousand dollars! or Decatur and a
similar sum for East Point.
BRIEF NEWS NOTES
% jP»
WHAT# HAS OCCURRED DURING
WE&K THROUGHOUT COUN¬
TRY AND ABROAD
EVENTS OFJMPORTANCE
Gathered From All Parts Of The
Globe And Told In Short
Paragraphs
European
In the opinion expressed by United
States army officers who have spe¬
cialized on the question of demobili¬
zation and readjustment of the enemy
forces, there is no longer any doubt
about the complete uselessness of the
remnants of the old German army now
in regimental and battalion depart¬
ments throughout Germany. fThis
view is entertained in .Coblenz.
American Red Cross agents have
been vainly trying to induce Trans-Si¬
berian railway authorities to halt a
“death train" on which 800 persons
are beinff.-went back toward Samara,
after they had been shipped from that
city in Russia on a 4,500-mile journey
across Siberia in mid-winter, many
of whom are ill with typhoid fever.
The German national assembly pass¬
ed the national array bill on third read¬
ing.
Ground was broken for “Pershing
Stadium” in Paris, where the great
inter-allied games will be held in
June. The stadium is to be situated
at Joinvilie, near Paris, and will have
seating accommodations for 22,000 per¬
sons and standing room for 40,000
more.
The Jugo-Slav delegation to the con¬
ference for peace has presented their
terirtorial claims, asking that the
isonzo be made the boundary between
them and Italy, to which Italy raises
serious objection.
The workmen’s and soldiers’ coun¬
cil of Munich has sent a wireless mes¬
sage to all countries announcing that
a dictatorship has been proclaimed in
Bavaria.
Domestic
Before an audience that crowded the
immense auditorium to the doors and
applauded him to the echo time and
again, ex-President Taft delivered an
addressing Atlanta in defense of the
league of nations as drafted at the
Versailles conference and brought back
to the United States by President Wil¬
son.
A telegram from Augusta, Git., says
that it Is announced that General Oli
commander at Camp
received orders to dis*
Tp^llanforb' v#fh ex¬
ception of a small auxiliary at the re¬
mount Station.
Capt. Elsberry V. White, survivor
of the Monitor-Merrimac battle in
Hampton Roads during the Civil war,
died at Clifton Springs, N. Y., aceoVd
ing to advices received by relatives at
Portsmouth, Va„ aged 80 years. He
was a member of the Confederate en¬
gineer corps, and was assistant engi¬
neer of the Merrimac.
Henry B. Gray, former lieutenant
governor of Alabama and prominent
capitalist, died suddenly at his home
in Birmingham as he sat down to din¬
ner. He had been down town and
was apparently in the best of health
and spirits. He was born in Georgia,
and had at one time been a reporter
on the Atlanta Constitution.
As soon as Mrs. Stella Abbott, who
shot and killed her husband, a fireman,
in Atlanta, Ga., makes bond of five
thousand dollars, she wll be released
from the Fulton county jail, where she
has been confined about two months.
All the charges against W. B. Cody,
chief of the Atlanta fire department,
were dismissed and his administration
as head of the department found to be
efficient by the board of fi remasters,
before whom his administration had
been thoroughly aired, and against
whom certain charges of inefficiency
had beep filed.
The Texas state senate has gone on
record as being opposed to a reduction
in the cotton acreage.
The mysterious death in an Atlanta
hospitatl of J. W. Hickman, who said,
before his death that he was from
Brunswick, Ga., was cleared when G.
A. Black, an employee of the American
Shipbuilding company at Brunswick,
surrendered to Chief of Police Burgess
of Brunswick, announcing that he was
the man who slnick Hillman the blow
that produced his death. He said that
in a dispute over a missing planer,
he struck Hillman, A later difficulty
ensued.
A Mitchell Palmer, the alien prop¬
erty custodian, said in a forma! state¬
ment that the resolution of Republi¬
can Senator Calder calling for infor¬
mation covering the operations of the
custodian’s office was fully answered
in his report now ready for submis¬
sion to President Wilson.
Thirty-nine per cent of the army of¬
ficers on duty November 11, 191S, and
33 per gent of the enlisted personnel
had been discharged by February 19.
Mayor William Hale Thompson, Re¬
publican candidate, was nominated for
re-election in the municipal primary
by an indicated plurality of forty-^ve
thousand over Chief Justice Harry Ol¬
son of the Chicago municipal court.
R. M. Sweitzer is the Democratic nom¬
inee by over seventy thousand plural¬
ity.
More than three hundred girls were
rescued by firemen, a score overcome
by smoke and a dozen injured in a
spectacular fire which destroyed the
building occupied by Duff’s Business
college in the heart of the business
district of Pittsburg.
by President Wilson as director gen¬
eral of the American relief adminis¬
tration, created under the new one
hundred million dollar European fam¬
ine relief bill with full authority to di¬
rect the furnishing of foodstuffs and
other urgent supplies purchased out
of the relief fund and to arrange for
their transportation, distribution and
administration.
Herbert Hoover announces that Ed¬
gar Richard and Theodore F. Whit
marsh, who have been directing the
affairs of the food administration dur¬
ing his absence in Europe, have been
appointed joint directors in the United
States of the newly created relief ad¬
ministration.
Attorney Genera! Gregory has rec¬
ommended to President Wilson com¬
mutation of the sentences of persons
convicted under the espionage act, a
review of whose cases by officials of
the department of justice has revealed
that the evidence of witful intent to
violate the law was too circumstantial
to warrant the carrying out of the
full sentences fixed by the trial juries.
President Wilson told a delegation
from the American Jewish congress he
was persuaded that the allied nations,
with the fullest concurrence of the
American government and people, are
agreed that Palestine should be laid
the foundation of a Jewish common¬
wealth.
Washington
President Wilson has denied the
published story of his views on the
questions. John Siiarp Williams,
Mississippi senator, says the presi¬
dent, when asked about Ireland, re¬
plied that the league of nations had
nothing to do with domestic ques¬
Differences between Democratic and
Republican leaders over the legisla¬
tive situation, echoes from which have
been heard daily since President Wil¬
made known his determination not
to call an extra session of the new
until his return from France,
may be forced to an issue in the sen¬
with the calling up of the “victory
bill. The Democrats are quoted
being resolved to push the loan
A London dispatch says: “It is nec¬
to hold the Dutch army ready
any effort, to annex Dutch ter¬
ritory, the Dutch minister declared
an address to the second chamber.
said disarmament at present would
dangerous."
A Paris dispatch says: "It would be
to exaggerate the success of
Wilson’s first speech at
so far as Us Paris audience is
President Wilson accurate¬
forcefully and courageously put be¬
the American people the condi¬
in Paris, and it is further felt
b§ bftt is fighting in Aiperica to save
the possibilities of the Paris
News comes by way of Copenhagen
that Norman Hapgood of New York
ben appointed American minister
Denmark in succession to Dr. Mau¬
rice Egan, who resigned on account of
health.
Nomination of Hugh C. Wallace of
Wash., to be ambassador to
France, has been confirmed by the
Authoritative opinion of American
navy officials apparently is definitely
against any proposal to
sink the surrendered German fleet.
outline obtained of the views held
Washington pointed out that such
course would represent sheer eco¬
waste for which there could be
possible excuse.
Special allowances for travel and
subsistence are classed as compensa¬
tion on which men in the military or
naval service are not required to make
tax returns or pay taxes, pro¬
the total does not exceed $3,-
500 for 191S.
Representative Frederick H. Gillett
of Massachusetts was nominated on
the first baliot by the Republican con¬
ference as the party candidate for
speaker in the next house of represen¬
The administration bill appropriat¬
ing one billion dollars to fulfill the gov¬
guarantee of wheat prices
the farmers for the 1919 crops was
passed by the senate, without’material
amendment, and now goes to confer¬
ence. sjPisil
Uncertainty over the status
in removed the immediate by Director future hd^wn C^^ral
announcement after conf^ffins
President Wilson that the gov¬
ernment would not turn the roads back
private management until congress
more opportunity to consider a
permanent program of legislation.
Homer S. Cummings, of Connecticut,
has been re-elected chairman of the
Democratic committee and
committee voted a complete Reor¬
for an aggressive campaign
in 1920.
Three additional eases of soldiers in
this country sentenced to be shot by
for military offenses and
sentences were either remitted
commuted by President Wilson,
have been fuade public by the war de¬
partment.
Major General Crowder, judge ad¬
vocate general of the aijny, appearing
before the senate military committee
at a resumption of hearings on the
courtmartial situation, said that all im¬
prisonment sentences imposed on men
of the army during the war and found
review to be too severe would be
through the president’s pow¬
er of remission.
It will cost the American people
a billion and a quarter dollars
year for the next twenty-five years
pay off the war debt, in addition to
of $765,000,000 a year.
Weekly Health Talks
What Is the Cause of
Backache?
BY DOCTOR CORNELL
Backache Is perhaps the most com¬
mon ailment from which women suf¬
fer. Rarely do you find anybody free
from it. Sometimes the cause Is ob¬
scure. but Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y.,
a high medical authority, says the
cause Is very often a form of catarrh
that settles In the delicate membranes
of the feminine organs. When these
organs are inflamed, the first symp¬
tom Is backache, accompanied by bear¬
ing down sensations, weakness, un¬
healthy discharges, irregularity, pain¬
ful periods, irritation, headache and
a general run-down condition. Any
woman in this condition is to be pit
led, but pity does not cure. The
trouble calls for Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription, which is a separate and
distinct medicine for women.
It is made of roots and herbs put up
without alcohol or opiate of any kind, for
Dr. Pierce uses nothing else in his pre¬
scription. Favorite Prescription is a nat¬
ural remedy for women, for the vegetable
growths of which it is made seem to have
been intended by Nature for that very
purpose. Thousands of girls and women,
young and old, have taken it, and thousands
have written grateful letters to Dr. Pierce
saying it made them well. In taking
Favorite Prescription, it is reassuring to
know that it goes straight to the cause of
the trouble. There is but one way to
overcome sickness, and that is to overcome
the cause. That is precisely what Favor¬
ite Prescription is intended to do.
Send 10c for trial pkg. of Tablets.
Address Invalids’ Hotel, BufFrlo, N. Y.
Constipated women, as well as men, are
advised by Dr. Pierce to take his Pleasant
Pellets. They are just splendid for cos¬
tiveness.
NOTED OFFICIAL
PRAISES THE NEW
STOMACH RELIEF
Hon. C. P. Grandfield’s Testimonial
Endorsing EATONIC Is Evidence
of Its Real Worth
Not often does a Postal
Service Official put himself
on record in this way. And
that no les3 & personage
than Hon. C. P, Grandfield,
the first Assistant Post¬
master under Taft. Is the
one who testifies to the vain©
of EATONIC and Its beneficial
results, places EATONIC
above the ordinary so-called
stomach cures and Indicates
that here, at last, la some¬
thing that will relieve all
forms of stomach misery—
add Indigestion, flatulence, heart
bum, sour, or gassy stomach. The letter,
devoid Of all unnecessary words, is printed be¬
low. It hits the nail squarely on the head.
Every sufferer from stomach misery should do
what he tells them.
Washington, D. C.
“Too rmieft prim fannot be giver*
EATONIC. Its beneficial results are
Unqualified.
Very truly yours,
C. P. G H A NT) f I ELD. ”
Here’s the secret: EATONIC takes up the
excess acidity, drives the jra* out of the body
— and the Bloat Goes With It! It is guaranteed
to bring relief or you get your money back!
Costs only a cent or two a day to use it. Gat a
box today from your druggist.
% 1 ft
Have you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
Take RH EUl\f A CIDE to remove the cans©
and drive the poison from the system.
* uiiKisunmi on the issidii
PITS UfUlJUTlba OS THE OUTSIDE’*
At All Druggists
Jas. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distributors
Baltimore* Md.
Georgia DIPLOMA
Alabama MEANS
__ Business life
College
Macon, ga.
WRITE FOR CATALOG
Bolb Beef and Milk
"PHE one breed that
J excels in both beef
ar.d milk is the Short¬
horn. Shorthorn steers
repeatedly broke the
records at the markets ia
1918, making the high¬
est record on the open
market of $20.50 per cwt.
And Shorthorn eowt
have milk records of
over 17.000 lbs. per 'T Vfsr. ft It the farmer '3 Breed:
having extra scale, quatitu and quiet temjreramcnt
One Treatment
with Cuticura
Clears Dandruff
All druggists; Soap 25, Ointment 25 & 50. Talcum 25,
Get Longer Better Wool
Shear with a machine and leave no second cats noi
scar the sheep. Use a Stewart No. 9 Ball Bearing
quickly. Machine. Gets 15% more wooleasily ant
Removes the fibre completely, making it
longer and better selling. Le ves a smooth, ever
stubb.efor next year’s growth. Machine soor
pay?foritsexf. Price? 14. Send us $2 —balance ox
•rnval v\ rite f or catalog.
CHIC L5XIBLE SHAFT COMPANY
P#pt * B 172, 12th Street and Central Ave., Chicago, II
FROST PROOF
Early Cabbage Jersey Plants
and Charleston Wakefield, Sue
fusion and Flat Dntch. By express, 500, $1.25:
LOCO, $2.00; 5,000 at $1.75; 10,000 and up at *1.5C
F. O. B. here. By Parcel Post, prepaid. 100, 35c;
500, $1.50; 1,000, $2.50. Wholesale and retail.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C