Newspaper Page Text
Had Your Iron Today?
Never Mind
Re-vitalize
BET it’s warm—-the more
A need then for keeping the vitality
up to par.
Vital men resist heat easily. Lan¬
guid ones are floored. Re-vitalize
yourself and you won’t mind the
weather.
Get new energy in little raisins.
1560 calories of energizing nutri¬
ment 75 per pound in Little Sun-Maids.
per cent pure fruit sugar.
Wonderful because this sugar
r 'doesn’t need, and, therefore, doesn’t
Yet tax digestion and thus heat the blood.
energizes almost immediately.
Contain fatigue-resisting food-iron
also. Try a box today.
Little Sun-Maids
Between-Meal Raisins
5c Everywhere
—in Little Red Packages
Improved Life-Saving Device.
In case of shipwreck, a few minutes’
delay in sending a line to the vessel
may mean life or death to those on
board. A line-throwing rocket pistol,
described in Popular Mechanics Mag;.
sine, has now been devised which, with
all equipment, weighs less than 50
pounds, and Is easily portable. The
pistol is fired from the hand.
FOR HURTS AND SORENESS
-
Apply Vacher-Balm. Nothing is “just
ns good,” no matter what you pay. Ask
your druggist. E, W. Vaeher, Inc., New
Orleans, La<— Advertisement.
GOODYEAR
Fed above is a gen
ioodyemHMPR£nd _ through.
: is the famous reliable 30 x 3}4 inch Goodyear
-Weather Tread Clincher.
Its companion is the popular 30 x 3 / l 2 inch Good¬
year Cross Rib.
The Goodyear Cross Rib is built of the same high
grade Egyptian cotton fabric that goes into the
All-Weather Tread Goodyear.
It has a long-wearing but differently designed
tread, and sells for less money.
More than 5,000,000 of these tires have been
sold in the last five years.
Their fine performance has demonstrated the
folly of buying unknown and unguaranteed tires
of lower price.
Ask your Goodyear Service Station Dealer about
their advantages.
GOO.
in Days of Yore.
The girl who leveled a hairbrush
nr a burglar and kept him standing
with his hands up until the police ar
j rived Yet didn't people cry after think it was It all over,
some necessary
to pass laws for the purpose of mak
ing woman man’s equal.
1
—-
The Cuticura Toilet Trio.
Having cleared your skin keep it clear
by making Cuticura your every-day
toilet preparations. The Soap to cleanse
nn j purify, the Ointment to soothe and
heaI the T a i cum to powder and per
fume No toilet table is complete
j without them.—Advertisement
A Tribute.
_^’So you played in Plunkville last
btr
tes.”
Li car they threw eggs Instead
Vs."
ks are more valuable than
led Yoriek
Vr-Journal.
THE CLEVELAND COURiER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA;
GEORGIA HAPPENINGS
OF TIMELY INTEREST
Uvalda.—James Linton, Sr., negro,
was killed and three other negroes
injured recently during a rain and
windstorm, when lightning struck a
tenant house on the farm of W. P.
Calhoun.
Lyerly.—Death of George F. Ander¬
son, 86, removed Lyerly’s oldest citi¬
zen and one of the few remaining Con¬
federate soldiers of Chattooga county.
His death, wdiile not wholly unexpect¬
ed, came as a shock throughout north¬
west Georgia.
Macon.—With Rev. George W.
Truett, editor of the First Baptist
Church, of Dallas, delivering the liter¬
ary address and urging the graduates
not to allow selfishness to enter into
their lives after leaving college, the
curtain rang down on the 1921-22 ses¬
sion of Mercer university.
Savannah.—The Georgia Association
of County Officers will begin a two
day’s session here in the municipal
auditorium soon. There has been so
much discussion in the daily papers
and in many of the county papers also,
in recent months, 0 f the fee system of
payment of several of these officers
that it is expected the session will
bring out expression of the united
opinion of officials themselves on this
now lively subject.
Rome.—L. L. Jones, of Lindale, was
bound over to the superior court re¬
cently by Justice Treadaway on the
charge of subornation of perjury. The
charge grew out of the statements of
two young men, Herman Fulton and
Clyde Sansom, recentlly arrested for
having whisky in their possession.
The young men swore that Jones told
them to swear that they had not se¬
cured the whisky from him and he
would protect them. It later turned
out they did get the whisky from
Jones.
Athens.—At a meeting of the Clarke
county commissioners Tuesday, July
12, was set as the date for the sec¬
ond election for county bonds. The
bond issues are to total $200,000 and
will be used for a memorial dormitory
on the University of Georgia, a bridge
over the Oconee river just at the en¬
trance to the city and road improve¬
ments. A large delegation of women
attended the meeting and pledged
their support in a movement headed
by Hugh H. Gordon, Jr., to put the
issues over.
Oxford.—An account of the special
railroad rates which have been obtain¬
ed for the Summer Assembly of the
North Georgia conference to be held
here June 26-30, it is expected all at¬
tendance records will be broken for
this summer meeting of the Epworth
League of the conference. There are
203 leagues in the North Georgia con¬
ference, with a membership that is
close to 10,000, and on a basis of
one delegate for each 25 members,
there is a possible attendance of 400
official delegates besides the visitors.
Columbus.—The first arrest in con¬
nection with the recent explosion of a
bomb on the porch of Mayor J. Homer
Dimon’s home was made when Ser¬
geant J. B. Kimball, stationed at Fort
Benning, was taken into custody. Kim¬
ball was ordered held at police station
without bail pending a preliminary
hearing. Police said he had corrobo¬
rated certain statements by persons
which tended to make him an accom¬
plice. He was held as an accessory
before the fact to the bomb explosion,
which under Georgia law is a capital
offense.
Albany.—The recent rains which
made the latter half of May one of
the wettest seasons ever experienced
in south Georgia also gave Impetus
to good roads campaign in this sec¬
tion. The heavy rains have left many
important roads under water, which is
so deep in some places that the en¬
gines of automobiles attempting to
plow through are drowned. Detours
at many points are necessary, and
there are the usual stretches of road
where the farmer and his mule team
find pulling stalled cars out of the mud
more profitable than fighting grass in
the fields.
Atlanta—Members of the special
committee named by Governor Thomas
W. Hardwick to investigate conditions
at the state prison farm held a confer¬
ence at the capitol and decided to be¬
gin preparations at once for the Inves¬
tigation. Those present at the con¬
ference were Judge Moses Wright,
Rome; Judge R. G. Bell, Cairo; Judge
W. E. H. Searcy, Griffin, and Judge
Henry C. Hammond, Augusta. Judge
H. C. Matthews, of Macon, was un¬
able to attend the conference because
of court duties but assured the gover¬
nor that he will be ready to serve
when the investigation begins. The
probe of conditions at the state prison
farm was inaugurated at the request
j of the state prison commission. The
five judges will visit the state farm as
J soon as Judge Matthews Is able to
leave his court and arrangements also
will be made later for holding a public
hearing at which all persons desiring
to testify will be heard.
Gainesville—United States Senator
Thomas E. "Watson has been invited
to come to Gainesville and deliver an
address to the people of northeast
Georgia on July 4.
Atlanta. — Judge George Hillyer,
former member of the railroad com¬
mission, unqualifiedly defended pro¬
hibition and placed the lack of law
enforcement squarely upon “law's de¬
lays and technicalities” in an address
to the graduating class of the Atlanta
Law school at the United States dis¬
trict court room in the federal build¬
ing recently
WET FEET BRING COUGHS UNO COLDS
Until entirely rid of a cough h or or cold, cold, look look out out They T are a source of danger.
Just taken first vUl dissipate usually manifestation ft soon few in after doses break hurry exposure of a of the Pe-ru-nft cold trouble or or PE-RU-NA Ing P catarrhal E-R success tj n N diseases. A ^ in the k ave The relief pro¬ of
a most per medicine to have on hand
persistent cough. ThWiilKietiEnirjiiejIiaiij lor everyday ills.
TABLETS OK LIQUID BOLD EVERYWHERE
KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE
WijpBHih,. II CHILLTONIC * But SS. Fine General i r™ Tonic
«
Ward* Off Malaria and Restores Strength. Try It
- u not Bold bj root dnnat, writ. Artkar t oUr * Co.. LooiortBo^Kr..
0-So-Easy Colors to Usa Putnam Fadeless Dyes lOc i r\ Wh v p »v
Silk. Wool Mor< >
and Cotton n Package For An Y
All at >ho Same Tims , Dye?
Natural Climax.
“Jim Bilkins is dead.”
“How come?"
“He stuck his head into the Red
Hog saloon and hollered Are.”
“Well?”
“They did.”
Examine Important to Mothers
carefully every bottle of
OASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the /rC
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
What He Wanted.
A man entered the office of a lawyer
at McPherson, Kan., and inquired:
“Eos das ban a lawyer’s place?”
“Yes, my friend. Wliat can I do for
you?”
“Ay tank ay want some papers
made. Ay buy me farm from Nels
Petersen, and Ay tank Ay want a
mortgage.”
“If you have bought a farm, what
you want Is a warranty deed, nolt a
mortgage.”
“No, Ay tank not. Ay buy me farm
in Dakoty, and take deed, but putty
soon long come man with mortgage,
and he take farm. This time Ay tanlf
Ay take mortgage,”—Judge.
How It Is at College.
At one of the dormitories of a well
known college for women two young
housemaids were comparing notes on
academic life. j
“Well,” said Norah, dimpling, “the
faculty has the brains, and the col¬
lege girls has the clothes, but, believe
me, the maids has the looks!”
—Youth's Companion.
Adam Again.
Wifey—Do you think there is a man
that could conscientiously say to his
wife, “You are the only woman I ever
loved?”
Hubby—Only one that I ran think of.
Wifey—Who? You, deafest?
Hubby—Oh, no, Adam !
Forget others’ faults by remember¬
ing your own.
v hN
ml'*' if
<%>•
Jbi
Here’s a real treasure
from Nature’s storehouse
/^OOD old Mother Nature has
placed in wheat and barley the
wonderful food properties which build
and sustain life and health.
Many so-called “refined” foods are
robbed of vital elements which the body ip
needs.
Grape-Nuts—that famous wheat and
barley food—brings you all the natural
goodness of the grains in perfected form,
with a crispness and flavor that charm
the appetite. “There’s a
You will find Grape-Nuts an ideal Reason”
dish for breakfast or supper-time.
Ready to serve from the package, with
cream or good milk.
Order Grape-Nuts from your
grocer today.
Grape-Nuts—the Body Builder
Made by Postum Cereal Company, Ino.
Battle Creek, Mich.
Theories cause the imagination to
work overtime.
Dr. Peery'a "Dead Shot” la powerful but
5 y ear s success iccess has has proved pr< It.
With on. j igle * dose, Worms or Tapeworm
in be expelled from the system, and no
castor oil or other purgative should be used
Advertisement. In Bddition. Mo---- Money - back —•- *- if not eatlafted”.— - * * -
All Clear Now.
“Money is the root of all evil. 1 ’ That
is the reason we all try to dig It up.—
Columbia Jester.
SAVE SHOES AND STOCKINGS
They will last twice as long if you Shake
Into Your Sho>?s ALLEN'S FOOT = EASE,
the powder for the feet. It takes the fric¬
tion from the shoe and gives quick relief to
Corns, Bunions, Callouses, sore, aching, swol¬
len, tender f?et. Shake Allen’s Foot = Ease
Into your shoes and enjoy the bliss *of feet
without an ache.—Advertisement.
Like Father, Like Son.
Billy had received a small book for
Easter containing Bible verses, on the
cover of which appeared a picture of
Jesus as the Good ’Shepherd seated
amidst His flock and holding a lamb
in His arms.
His father carefully explained the
significance of the picture and added:
“And you, my son, are one of His lit¬
tle lambs.”
The child studied the picture a mo¬
ment.
“And you are one of the old sheep,
are you, daddy?" was his guileless
comment.
His Stopping Point.
“Paid your tailor's bill yet?” asked
a friend.
“Can't,” replied the young man.
“Paid the florist?”
“Quite irnpos.”
“What about your motoring bill?”
"They’re still sending it in.”
"If you can't pay for your own liv¬
ing,” exclaimed his friend, in dis¬
gust, “why don’t you be decent
enough to die?”
“And then run up an undertaker’s
bill?”, retorted the young man. “My
clear chap, there’s a limit!"
Self-Protection.
“Why did you brag so on Fred’s rot¬
ten home-brew?” “I had to; I gave
him the recipe!”—Judge.
DROPSY lieved TREATED WEEK Short in breathing a few FREE hour?; ONE re¬
few days; regulates the liver, swelling reduced in a
and heart; purifies blood, kidneys, stomach
the strengthens the
entire system. Writ • for Free Trial Treatmmnt.
COILUH DROPSY REMEDY CO., Dept. E.O., ATLANTA, GA.
KODAK FINISHING—Send negative for free
sample print, free enlargement offer, and
price list ORLANDO PHOTO FINISHING
CO.. 328 Marlon St., ORLANDO. FLORIDA.
AGENTS — EXTRAORDINARY OPPORTU¬
NITY. New fruit product "Jells" anv frutt
Juice liko magic. Joy-Jel Co., St. Joseph, Mo.
LEARN TO SIVIM—COMPLETE INSTRIIC
TIONS and remarkable device to keep you
afloat sent postpaid for 75c in stamps or
money order. Money back guarantee. GU3'
BATHS, PALM BEACH, FLORIDA.
Kotlakers—For best possible results from your
films, send them to us. Prices lowest, profes.
dual. Regal Pliotu Finishers, yteksburg. Miss.
A GREAT BLESSING
Relief for Gallstones. Gravel, Stomach, Liver,
Kidney, Bladder scalding and burning, and
Rheumatism assured. Guaranteed to d-> the
work, or money refunded. Jack’s G&llston#
Remedy making a clean sweep everywhere
It goes. 8 oz. bottle, 16 to 30 days’ treatment,
$1.25. Sent by Pa-cel Post C. O. D if dealr d,
NEW LIFE MEDICINE CO.
619 Underhill St. Louisville. Kfv
LOOK OLD? look isn’t hair bottle uray, makes very necessary of tain, Q-B&n straggly old. people Hair — It a
Color Restorer will bring back original color
quickly direct — stops from dandruff. At all good druggists,
75c, or Htuix-Ellu, Memphis. Teas.
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 24-1922.
Usually So.
“Whom does the baby resemble?"
“If I am correctly Informed, he gets
ills beautiful eyes from my wife's fam¬
ily and his weak chin from mine.”—
Judge.
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
X I t indigest row ml ..
25 cm
6 Bell-ans
H ot water
Bell-ans Sure Relief
25^ and 754 Packages, Everywhere
Disturbed Slumbers.
My sister and her two young sons
visited grandmother last summer. The
older one, who had a new toy dog,
was much disturbed lest his dog’s
Slumbers be disturbed by the noisy
young brother.
One afternoon, shortly after their
arrival, an elderly neighbor In answer
to a persistent ringing of the bell, dis¬
covered my young nephew at the door
with liis woolly dog tucked under his
arm.
“Would you please put my little
dog to sleep in your bed?” lie queried,
“It is too noisy at grandmother’s.”—
Chicago Tribune. ,
A Worse Evil.
“So the soothsayer told you she
couldn’t read the future until you gave
her '$i,0OO‘tb jput under her’pillow and
‘sleep “Yds.” op’iTx .
“I Iiotfe didn't let her have the
money?”
“Certainly ivas not. I said that while
she sleeping on my $1,000 I
would be wide awake, and I’d rather
not know about the future than suffer
from Insomnia.”—Birmingham Age
Herald;