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PE-RU-NA
A Great Medicine
M«. Af. J. Blley, R. EL No, 1, Box M, Cal*
vert, Texas, wri tee:
“I bar© used Pe-ru-na and know it i« good
for colds, coughs and catarrh. It cured my
catarrh and I do not take cold when I use
Pe-ru-na. It lfi a great medicine.”
been During looked the last fifty the Tears, reliable Pe-ru-na medicine has
upon sut
tor catarrh of every description, whether It
be of the nose and throat, stomach, bowels
or other organs.
emergencies, By keeping Pe-ru-na in the bouse for
serious sickness may fre¬
quently be prevented. U&e it after the grip
or Spanish Flu,
Sold Everywhere
Not Pats of Approval.
Wife—Joe, your mother got to talk¬
ing this afternoon about what kind of
a hoy you were. She said your j|rhool
teacher vised to pat you on the back
nearly every day.
Hul)—That's true, my dear, but gen¬
erally the patting was too low down
for comfort. Boston Transcript.
MOTHER! OPEN
CHILD'S BOWELS WITH
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
Your little one will love the "fruity”
tasle of ‘‘California Fig Syrup” even if
constipated, bilious, irritable, feverish,
or full of cold. A teaspoonful never
falls to cleanse the liver and bowels.
In a few hours you can see for your¬
self how thoroughly it works all the
sour bile, and undigested food out oi
the bowels and you have a well, play¬
ful child again.
Millions of mothers keep ‘'California
Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea
spoonful today saves a sick child to¬
morrow. Ask your druggist for genu¬
ine "California Fig Syrup,” which has
directions for babies and children of
all ages printed on bottle. Mother!
You must say ‘' California ’’ or you may
get an Imitation tig syrup.—Advertise¬
ment.
What Counted.
John’s last year teacher met his
mother, Mrs. Flaherty, on the street
the other day. “And how does John
dike his new teacher?” she asked.
Mrs. Flaherty returned:. "Oh, he
don't like her so well as he do you.
but I think she’ll he better for him.
You see, Miss T-, she ain’t so
brainy ns you wuz, hut she’s a whole
lot more avoirdupois.”
SHE DYED A SWEATER,
SKIRT AND CHILD’S COAT
Each package of “Diamond Dyes” con¬
tains directions ao simple any woman «gm
dye or tint her worn, shabby dresses,
skirts, waists, coats, stockings, sweaters,
coverings, if she draperies, hangings, everything,
even has never dyed before. Buy
“Diamond Dyes”—no other kind—then
mond perfect home dyeing is sure because Dia¬
fade, Dyes are guaranteed not to spot,
whether atreak, the or run. Tell your druggist dye
material you wish to is
wool or silk, or whether it ia linen, cotton
or mixed goods.—-advertisement.
A soft answer turneth away wrath,
and bard coal' instead of soft turneth
away n lot more.
f6r colds, croup and pains.
Use Vaeher-Bulm ; it relieves at once.
AVOID IMITATIONS.
If we have no agent where you live,
■write to E. W. Vacher, Inc., New
Orleans, La.—Advertisement.
Brotherhood of man comes when
there is plenty for all.
Weak and Worn?
Mas winter left you dull, tired; all
worn out ? Do you have constant back¬
ache, sharp, with headaches, dizzy spells,
kidney shooting irregularities? pains, or annoying
Influenza and
grip epidemics kidneys have left thousands with
weak and failing strength.
Don't wait until serious kidney trouble
develops. Help the weakened kidneys
with Doan's Kidney Pills. Doan's
have helped thousands and should help
you. Ask your neighbor!
A Georgia Case
Mrs. Fannie
Wheeler, 310 E.
Boundary St., Quit
man, (Ja., says;
‘‘My baek got so
weak and lame 1
could hardly get
around. I had con¬
duit pains
gh my back
and the least exer¬
tion tired me. I
had shortness of
my kidneys
Kidney act right. I
used Doan’s Pills and thev
soon made my back strong and X felt
like a different person.”
Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c a Bo*
DOAN’S K P TAY
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO! N. Y.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
/" A KID THOU skalt keep the feast of weeks unto
y 1 the Lord thy God witk a tribute of a freewill
£. J offering of thine hand, which thou shalt give
unto the Lord thp God, according as the Lord thy God
hath blessed thee.
AND thou shalt rejoice before the Lord thy God, thou,
and thy son, and thy daughter, and thy manservant, and
thy maidservant, and the Levite that is within thy gates,
and the stranger, and the fatherless, and the widow 1 , that
are among you, in the place which the Lord thy) God has
chosen And to thou place shalt his name remember there. that thou bondman mm
wast a
in Egypt; and thou shalt observe and do these statutes.
THOU shalt observe the feast of tabernacles seven days,
after that thou hast gathered in thy com and thy! wine;
AND thou shalt rejoice in thy) feast, thou, and thy) son,
and thy) daughter, and thy 1 manservant, and thy maidserv¬
ant, and the Levite, the stranger, and the fatherless, and
the widow, that are within thy) gate.
SEVEN days shalt thou keep a solemn feast unto the
Lord thy! God, in the place which the Lord shall choose;
because the Lord thy) God shall bless thee in all thy in¬
crease, and in all the works of thine hands, therefore thou
shalt surely rejoice.
-DEUTERONOMY, CH. >6, v. , wi .
DAY EXPRESSIVE
OF A NATION’S
GRATITUDE
Turkey nml cranberry sauce, crisp
weather, a general sense of well-being
and football are In the air at the very
mention of Thanksgiving, writes Mar¬
guerite Samuels In the New Orleans
Tlmes-PlcayUne,
But football and too much dinner
are not, In the final analysis, all of
Thanksgiving. There is a deeper, in¬
spirational side to the day set aside
through three hundred years of Amer¬
ican history ns the great national
celebration of gratitude.
Do you remember the simple story
of that first Thanksgiving day as you
read It la your primary Vender? And
the thrill of thankfulness for national
greatness and goodness that came to
you ns your chubby fingers drew de¬
formed turkeys and round-eyed Pil¬
grim fathers on the school blackboard?
It was in 1021, the fall following
the landing at Plymouth, that the Pil¬
grims celebrated the first Thanksgiv¬
ing day. The little colony, one hun¬
dred and two souls who had fared
westward from England for their con¬
science’s sake, had weathered the
storms of the Atlantic and the worse
hardships of u New England winter,
and they' had won through at last
to a sort of tranquility—comparatively
speaking.
Back from the rocky coastline of
Massachusetts, with its thunder of
limitless waves, a little group of Jog
houses crowded together behind the
tall stockade, feeling safe in their
nearness to each other.
Garnered com filled the barns and
the storerooms of the houses were
pungent with ripe apples. The colony
felt firmly established in the New
World of Its seeking. Even the silent¬
footed Indians had begun to under¬
stand that there was room for them
and for the pale faces too. The de-
Oh, Bovs—Stuffing!
vout Puritan spirit of the travelers in
the Mayflower felt that there was
sufficient cause for thanking God.
The First Thanksgiving.
And so it was that the first day of
organized thanksgiving was set. The
whole little colony, in its best buckled
shoes and high hats, with blunder¬
busses across square shoulders, sallied
forth from the stockaded homes
through snow to the log church, there
to give-community thanks for the free¬
dom of their stem lives.
Outside, the Indians crouched be¬
hind the tlrs and beeches, watching
and wondering.
From the Pilgrim colony, the custom
spread to others in the New England
states. In 1030 the Massachusetts Bay
colony set aside a day for thanksgiv¬
ing, and frequently thereafter, until
1080, when it became an annual festi¬
val in the colony.
Connecticut appointed a day in
1(530. and annually after 1047, except
in 1075. The Dutch in New Nether¬
lands set aside a day in 1014 and oc¬
casionally thereafter. During the War
of Independence the Continental con
gress appointed one or more thanks¬
giving days each year, except in 1777.
President Washington set aside Tisurs
day. Nov. 20, 1780, as a day of na¬
tional thanks, and again in 1795 he
called the country together for such
a celebration. President Madison, at
the close of the War of 1812. appointed
a day.
In New York state, from 1817 on,
the festival was annual.
In some of the southern states e na¬
tional Thanksgiving day met with op¬
position as a relic of Puritanic bigotry,
so utterly at variance with the Cav¬
alier ideals of the southern colonists;
but by 1858 proclamations were Issuer!
by the governors of 25 states and two
territories.
Is New England Festival.
Perhaps it is natural that the South,
so fur in thought and experience from
the colonizers of New England, should,
even yet, be less whole-hearted in its
celebration of Thanksgiving than is
the eastern section of the United
States. -With its commemoration of
hardships of 1021). with its ceremonies
of the harvest. Thanksgiving is essen¬
tially a New England festival. And to
see it truly carried out, you must see
it tlierp.
In Massachusetts, it is the signal
for great family reunions. From Cali¬
fornia. from the high sens, from the
neighboring town, the sons and daugh¬
ters and cousins and aunts and uncles
foregather at the old homestead on
Thanksgiving day. With the first
snowfall of the season, generally
scheduled for the last week in Noveni
her. the roomy sleighs and the vast
bearskin rugs are hauled out of their
summer mothballs; and from early
morning until noon, there is a gay
jingle of sleigh bells going and coining
between the railroad station and the
farmhouse.
After the dinner—a tremendous af
fair—the old people sit half dozing
about the open fires, telling stories of
the New England that is gone.
“Do you remember?" says one: and
they are off in. a glorious revel of
recollection of their own youth, when
automobiles were unknown, and Bus
ton might have been 1.500 instead of
15 miles away.
The young people of the fa- :y.
deeply wrapped in fur coats and rugs,
already had dashed off along the
slippery roads to Cambridge and “The
Game.”
The Harvard .stadium on Thanks
giving day was a view of serried rows
of excitement never to be forgotten.
The grey rhythmic curves of the coli¬
seum all flamlngiy gay with banners
and flowers and girls' holiday hats.
Along the Harvard section, red roses
and crimson sweaters bloomed in the
menagerie of fur coats and rugs.
Where the Yale contingent cheered for
the bulldog, the blue of Parma violets
was like a twilight mist along the rows
of spectators.
A whistle—and the game Is on.
Tensely leaning forward, the 80,000
watch ns if life and death were being
decided in the arena below. At the
first touchdown the winning side goes
mud with joy. Flags wave, arms and
hats are promiscuously pitched about,
perfect strangers pat other perfect
strangers on the back; and thrilled
girls shake hands with boys they never
saw before.
Meanwhile the snow comes down
softly, in a powdery ruin, nnd the final
goal sees frozen hands and feet res
tlvely glad to race off to warm donnl
lory teas, where the victory is cele¬
brated In English breakfast, or the
defeat drowned in orange pekoe,
cakes and laughing chatter.
In Boston Thanksgiving morning
great crowds fill Trinity, or whatever
church has been designated for the
union service. The pigeons in Copley
square flutter over them—tame friend¬
ly doves of “peace on earth, good will
to men."
Thanksgiving in New Orleans.
Here in New Orleans several of the
churches hold special union services,
and the day is commemorated in typi¬
cal New Orleans fashion—thanking
God by giving others something for
which to he thankful. Magical basket
dinners, containing everything from
turkey to dessert, are given to the
hungry poor of the city by the Elks,
the 81iriners. the Salvation Army,
Kingsley house and other benevolent
organizations. School children remem¬
ber, with fruit and nuts, the sufferers
at the Home for Incurables.
For the Great Day Coming.
The pumpkin pie as It may be seen
in its natural state.
WRI6LEY
AFTER
EVERY
EAL”
WRIGLEYS
Newest
Creation
10 for
A delicious
peppermint
flavored sugar
jacket around pep¬
permint flavored chew¬
ing eum.
Will aid your appetite
and digestion, polish
your teeth and moisten
your throat. B129
The Flavor Lasts
Dogs Trained Not to Bark.
j The dingo, or wild dog of Australia,
; neither harks por growls in Its wild
: state, Imt learns to do both when
tamed and placed among domestic
j dogs. The Aust ralian kelpies, the most
prized of cattle dogs, which contain
j a strain of dingo blood, are trained
! never to hark.
;
j If the racket of the tire engine never
loses its thrill, you're young.
1
: Sure Relief
j FOR INDIGESTION
I INDlCTSTiOff/j
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Bell-ans Sure Relief
j 25$ and 75$ Packages. Everywhere
pqcpFi po SfSSl S££w.
Pianos are to he taxed in Paris at
a rate of 30 francs for an upright and
00 francs for a grand.
'
Never say “Aspirin” without saying “Bayer.”
WARNING! Unless you see name “Bayer” on tablets,
you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by
physicians^over 21 years and proved safe by milions for
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Accept only “Bayer*’ package which contains proper directions.
“T"“•ggesustefttssa. Harniv tin boxes of 12 tablets—Bottles of ”4 an<1 mo <u a _
_ .
Cuticura Talcum
" Fascinatingly Fragrant — ..... -
Always Healthful
Seep 2St, Ointment 25 and 50c, Tticnm 25c.
m Night and Morning.
Hate Strong, Hiaithy
Eyes. If they Tire. Itch,
Smarter Burn, if Sore,
Irritated, Inflamed or
Granulated, useMurine
n. Soothes. Pefreskes. Safe for
nt or Adult. At ail Druggists. W- : **for
• E>e L" ok Racist E?« krseir C&.. o
Viseline
R«£US.P*t,Wf
PETROLEUM JELLY
For sores, nroken
blisters,burns, cuts
and all skin irri¬
tations. /—
Also innumerable
toilet uses.
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES
chesebkough mfg. ca
State _ Street _ vC4>nsouDAT«©)
New York
The earth's envelope of air is now
estimated to extend for 300 miles
above it.
EASY TO KILL
RATS
and
MICE
By Using the Genuine ^ ^ £T ^ JQ
ELECTRIC PAS1
Ready for Use - Better Than Tt
Directions in 15 languages in every b
Rats. Mice, Cocfcroaches. Ants and n
destroy disease. food and ~
8tea
to ran from rt__________
a _______
35c and f: s. ” Money bade if it fail
S. GoreriuiiAM; hays it