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Woman Relied Upon Lydia;
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•tored me to normal health. I often
Lave occasion and do recommend youi
Vegetable have troubles Compound similar to my friends who
to my own. You
may use these facts as a testimonial.
Eva Aldrich, 218 Union St., Emporia,
Kansas.
There are many women who first used
our girlhood Vegetable Compound during their
Help during days. trying They found it a valuable
they it whenever periods. In later feel
wears those annoying use which they
often have. symptoms women
Lydia is E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound pared carefully a woman’s from medicine. the bestqualityof It is pre¬
medicinal plants, whose properties are
especially have. adapted to correct the troubles
women
_
There never was a rich man who
didn't do more kindly deeds than he
was given credit for.
some men have to have n hard and
fast contract before they will consent
to be honest with themselves.
ou Need
HANCOCK
Sulphur Compound
Physicians agree that sulphur Is one of the
roost effective blood purifiers known. blotches,
For pimples, black-heads, freckles,
and tan.as well a s for more serious face, scalp
and body eruptions, hives, ecrema. etc., use
this scientific compound of sulphur. As a lo¬
tion. It soothes and heals; taken internally
It gets atth* root ot the trouble.
For over 2S years Hancock Sulphur Com¬
pound has given satisfaction.
60c and $1.20 the bottle.
at your druggist’s. It he can’t supply you
>»nd his name and the price in stamps and
ahtTwe will tendyou a bottle direct
HANCOCK ' LIQUID SULPHUR
' 'COMPANY
Baltimore. ML
Hane«d Sulphur Comftund Ctint
55t~~jtr uu with th*
Liquid QmfcunJ,
MAN’S
BEST AGE
A man is as old as his organs; he
<an be as vigorous and healthy at
70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in
performing their functions. Keep
your vital organs healthy With
COLD MEDAL
CAPSULES'
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric arid troubles since
J696; corrects disorders; stimulates vital
organs. All druggists, three sizes.
Xeok for the name Gold Medal on every box
and accapt no imitation
JUST DRAGGED
SO WEAKENED
Florida Lady Was in a Miserable Con.
dition, But Says She Found Cardui
Helpful, and Got Well.
Blountstotm, Fla.—In explaining how
*he found Cardui so helpful during
■change of life, Mrs. Ella M. Bailey, of
thK place, said:
"I became so weakened it was an ef¬
fort for me to get around. I knew
xvitat was the matter, but I felt like
I couldn’t give up.
“I just dragged, and I certainly was
nervous. I was so restless I could not
sit down long—yet so weak I couldn't
get about. It Is a most miserable and
such a helpless feelilig.
“I would get depressed and out of
heart.
“I began to feel, after awhile, there
was no use to try to get well. This
Is all wrong, for It makes a person
worse. (
“I had heard of Cardui, and thought
tt might strengthen me. A neighbor
had used it' with good results.
*T took one bottle (of Cardui). then
I saw I wasn’t so nervous, so kept it
up. left
“Gradually the nervousness me.
I began to eat and sleep better. Was
soon well, and ail right.
"Cardui did wonders for roe. and I
certainly do recommend it."
Thousands of other women have
written, to tell of the beneficial results
obtained by taking Cardui, and to rec¬
ommend it to others.
Cardui has stood the test of exten¬
sive use, for more than forty years.
In the treatment of troubles common
to women.
Good druggists, everywhere, sell
Cardui, the woman's tonic. Try lfc
For several years I
had severe pains at
menstrual periods,
making weak and interfering me very
with my regular du¬
ties. I tried several
remedies without ob¬
taining induced relief. I was
E. Pinkham’s to try Vege¬ Lydia
table Compound by
friends and it re-
A Condensed Record Of Happenings
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
Foreign
The Marquis of Dondonderry has
decided to move out of Seaham Hall,
which the family have occupied for
over 100 years, and sell the contents
at auction.
The seat of the Russian government
probably will be moved back to Petro
grad if diplomatic relations with east¬
ern Europe are re-established, accord¬
ing to well authenticated reports orig¬
inating in the Kremlin.
Gen. Wu Pei-fu, China’s military ge¬
nius, has invited Dr. Sun Yat Sen,
president of the republic of South Chi¬
na, to come to Peking and aid the re¬
union movement. Wu Ting Fang, for¬
mer Chinese ambassador to Washing¬
ton, has been offered the premiership,
but has not yet accepted.
The draft of the new Irish consti¬
tution made public on the eve of the
Irish election, gives, as the document
itself states, force of law to the Anglo
Irish treaty and expressly declares
that any provisions of the constitution
or any amendment thereto, or any law
enacted under the constitution, which
is in any respect repugnant to the trea¬
ty, shall be void and inoperative.
Three hundred persons are known
to have been drowned and many per¬
sons more missing following an abnor¬
mal rise in the Acelhuate and Arenal
rivers, which overflowed their banks
and Joined together in one stream, in¬
undating the Candelaria district of San
Salvador, Republic of Salvador.
The first battle of the Carnegie
peace palace was won by correspond¬
ents of the world, who refused to lie
excluded from the palace while the
postponed Genoa conference on Rus¬
sian affairs was holding its first meet¬
ing. Indignant newspaper men and
women, representing more than twen¬ tiie
ty nations, igored the edict of
Dutch foreign office that Journalists
should not even be admitted to the
gardens of the palace and forced their
way through the gates and into the
building where they demanded an aud¬
ience with the Dutch foreign minister,
and presented a petition to him in per¬
son protesting ngainst such treatment
of the world press in the international
palace of peace. It was finally decided
to place squads of Dutch soldiers in
the corridors to limit the movements
of journalists to the corridors adjacent
to the main entrance.
The allied reparations committee,
by a three to one vote, overriding the
negative ballot of France, gave the
bankers’ committee full authority to
propose an international loan for Ger¬
many on any basis the committee may
think desirable.
Washington
A determination of a fixed policy
for the development of the govern¬
ment’s projects at Muscle Shoals, Ala.,
before congress adjourns was asked
by Senator Underwood, of Alabama,
democratic leader, during a discussion
in the senate of Henry Ford’s offer for
the properties and the propaganda
campaign, alleged to be in prograss
both for and against acceptance.
House and senate conferees on the
army appropriation bill reached a com¬
promise on an army of 125,000 enlisted
men for the next twelve months.
President Harding received the plea
o fthe Philipine parliamentary mission
for a grant of independence to the
Filipino people and promised a reply
setting forth the views of the execu¬
tive.
The statement was made at the
White House that the
is not contemplating any
immediate or drastic action in the
tinuing nation-wide coal strike.
Charles W. Morse. New York ship¬
builder, his three sons and others who
are charged with conspiracy to de¬
fraud the United States by means of
war contracts with the Shipping
board, filed an application to the dis¬
trict court of appeals for permission
to make a special appeal from the de¬
cision of the criminal division of the
District of Columbia supreme court
overrulling demurrers, to the indict¬
ment.
Summer training camps have been
opened everywhere over the country
under supervision for youths of the
reserve ofieer training corps, part of
the machinery of the new defensive
military policy set up in the national
defense act of 1920.
The Federal Reserve Bank at San
Francisco has asked the federal re¬
serve board for its attitude upon a pos¬
sible reduction by the California bank’s
rediscount rate from four and a half
to four per cent, it is said at the treas¬
ury.
A new fight against Senator
H. Newberry for his activities m revis
i the navaI appropriations bill
I brewing in congress. A group in
| the senate determined and house resistance are preparing to the at
1 offer
jMare j tempts Island of Newberry provision in of slashing the
, priations measure.
President Harding is understood
j have taken a determined stand
j action bills by congress for disposal at this of time tjie on
tug
meat's nitrate plant at
*' 9 v
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
The last general accounting of the
public debt discloses a bond total of
$16,002,258,970. The four liberty loan
obligations now total $15,118,418,500.
The remained of this bond obligation
represents consols of 1930, the United
States loan of 1925, three Panama
bond Issues, conversion bonds and pos¬
tal savings bonds.
The house conference committee on
the military appropriation bill decided
recently to submit direct to the house
the senate amendment appropriating
$7,500,000 for continuation of work on
dam No. 2 of the Muscle Shoals power
project in Alabama.
The Cable bill, which would regulate
the naturalization and citizenship of
married women, has been favorably re¬
ported by the house committee on im¬
migration and naturalization and will
be pressed by the committee for con¬
sideration in advance of the merchant
marine bill.
Appropriation of $150,000 for imme¬
diate emergency use in eradication of
citrus canker in Florida is provided
for in a bill introduced by Representa¬
tive Smithwick of Florida.
Prohibition Commissioner Haynes
declares in a formal statement, refer¬
ring to the “prohibition afloat” pam¬
phlet issued by the Anheuser-Busch
company that he would “act in a vig¬
orous manner to enforce the law as
soon as the department of justice and
the courts have determined where the
Volstead act applies to vessels sailing
under the American flag. He adds
that he would not break one law to
enforce another.
Domestic—
Mrs. Anne Cappuccio and Mrs.
Marie de Salvo were arrested by the
police, who charged that they had
fought a revolver duel at Crane and
Webster streets, Newark, N. J.
Mr. William J. Ewing, sixty-five,
former editor of the old Nashville
American, widely-known Tennessee
newspaperman, died at his home at
Nashlvlle, Tenn., of pneumonia.
The city, commissioners of Birming¬
ham who were indicted on charge of
violating the corrupt practices elec¬
tion act, in a formal request asked for
immediate trial.
Judge McCann in court at Ebens
burg. Pa., granted the United Mine
Workers a preliminary injunction
against the Vinton Collieries company.
A lieutenant from the army air ser¬
vice and a sergeant from the photo¬
graphic section were burned to death
when thoir airplane fell at Louisville,
Ky.
Warrants charging kidnaping were
sworn to by William Schawe, against
Albert Marshall, Cincinnati (O.) dan
sant owner, and George Macdunham,
dansant manager, as the result of
carrying away of Mrs. Clara Marshall.
Train No. 4 of the fast New Orleans
and New York Limited on the Louis¬
ville and Nashville railroad, split a
switch three miles north of Canoe,
Ala., crashing through a potato pack¬
ing shed and killing Willie Blundean,
a small boy, who was in the packing
shed.
Secretary of War Weeks delivered
the baccalaureate address at the West¬
ern Reserve University the other day.
The university is at Cleveland, Ohio.
He declared that the drift of the Unit¬
ed States government during recent
years was gradually weakening the na¬
tion’s structure by undermining the
Constitution and sweeping away the
principles of party responsibility held
so dear by our ancestors of other days.
While in bathing at a public pond
near Augusta, Ga., Claude B. McEwing,
twenty-four years old, a resident of
Washington, D. C., ventured beyond
the safety rope and was drowned.
Roy Marsden admitted, according to
the police, that he had robbed the poor
boxes in thirty-two Milwauka church¬
es recently.
Use of the word “takola" by the Old
Dominion Beverage company, of Rich¬
mond, Va., is an infringement of the
trademark of the Coca-Cola company.
Judge D. Lawrence Groner, of the
United States district court for east¬
ern Virginia, has decided, according
to advises received by C. V. Meredith,
counsel for the Coca-Cola company.
Explosion of an ammonia tank locat¬
ed in a tunnel under the boiler room
of the Parker Webb Packing eorhpanw,
Detroit. Mich., killed four employes
and damaged the plant considerably.
The Illinois chamber of commerce
! has asked President Harding to reap¬
point W. P. G. Harding as governor of
the federal reserve board.
The production of commercial peach¬
es in Georgia this year probably will
not exceed 8,700 cars, including ex¬
press shipments, according to the esti¬
mate of Z. R. Pettet. agricultural statis¬
tician for Georgia of the United States
bureau of markets and crop estimates.
! Former submarine chaser No. 205,
owne( j E T g u j zer 0 j Brooklvn,
j- y., w as burned to the waters' ed^e
and fank cft - Sand Kev, near Kev
West Fla JIrs Su i zer was s jig. htI ^
mimed
Ey ^ ^ of everv del tae the
^rican Federation of Labor con
j venttqn. in Cincinnati indorsed the
nationwide coal strike that since the
f1rst of April has kept half a million
miners from work, and also indicated,
^y a demonstration, its approval of the
threatened walkout of more than a
I million railroad workers.
How God
Restores
By REV. LEW W. GOSNELL
Assistant Dean. Moody BibU
Institute, Chicago.
TEXT-So when they had dined, Jesus
saith to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jonas,
lovest thou me more than these? He
saith unto Him, Yea, Lord; Thou knowest
that I love Thee. He saith unto him.
Feed my lambs.—John 21:13.
Adelaide Proctor tells the story of
a nun who the at a con-
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vent through the years, and now that
she had come back it was awaiting
her. She slipped back Into her old
position and few knew she had ever
gone away.
The late Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman
used to tell this story to illustrate
God’s gracious way of restoring his
erring saints. In our text we have
one of the great scriptural examples
of such gracious restoration, from
which nil may take comfort.
Christ inquires of Peter, "Simon,
son of Jonas, lovest thou me more
than these?” Peter had protested that
though nil others might forsake
Christ, he would never leave Him.
But he had shown, too sadly, that he
did not love his Master “more than
these." How Christ’s question must
have rebuked him! And hi his reply
it is to be noted that all the old spirit
of boasting is gone and there is no
claim to love Christ more than others
love Him.
Some Searching Question*.
Peter's humility is shown in another
way. In Christ’s question, the word
used for iove, In the original, indi¬
cates an unselfish love which expects
no return—the love of friendship.
When Peter replies, he uses a lower
word for love, indicating a pergonal,
clinging affection which seeks return.
In other words, he has censed to
boast of bis iove, not only as to quan¬
tity, but also ns to quality. He only
dares to assert he is fond of Jesus!
Moreover, the third time Jesus in¬
quired as to Simon’s love, He used
the same word, in the original, which
Peter had been using, as if to say:
“Are you sure you have even this
lower kind of iove, that you are even
fond of me?" No wonder Peter was
grieved when Christ said unto him
the third time, "lovest thou me?" He
can only reply; “Lord, thou know¬
est all things; thou knowest that 1
love thee.” Peter feels he has so
failed In showing his love that only
his Lord, who knows all things, can
see it!
But let us not lose sight of the
grace underlying the searching ques¬
tions of Christ. Thrice had Peter de¬
nied Him In public, and he is here
given the privilege of thrice publicly
confessing Him.
But our text deals not only with
Peter’s confession, but also with his
commission, “Feed my lambs.” Indeed,
after both the second and third con¬
fessions, Christ says: “Feed (R. V.
tend) my sheep.” These are the lambs
and sheep for whom the Great Shep¬
herd died. What a great evidence of
His love for Peter, and of the confi¬
dence He reposes In the once erring
disciple, that He will commit to his
care those who are so precious to
Him! Christ had said to Peter be¬
fore bis fall: "When thou art con¬
verted, strengthen thy brethren." Now
that Peter has been converted, or
turned, and knows Ills own weakness,
he Is preparing to help others. It
has been beautifuly said: “When
brought to nothing, He can use us
in our nothingness, and when He can
use us, ne will."
The Privilege of Martyrdom.
There is still another way in which
Christ’s grace was manifested toward
Simon on the occasion we are consid¬
ering. although it is sometimes not
appreciated. After the third confes¬
sion. Jesus said: “When thou wast
young thou girdedst thyself, and walk
edst whither thou wouldest: but when
thou slialt be old, thou Shalt stretch
forth thy hands, and another shall
gird thee, and carry thee whither
thou wouldest not." John explains:
“This spoke he, signifying by what
death be should glorify God.” Tradi¬
tion tells us that Peter was crucified
head downward, since he did not feel
worthy to be upright on his cross as
was his Lord. Not all would covet
such a death, but it is to be recalled
that Peter had boasted of his willing¬
ness to die for Christ and then had
miserably failed. How he must have
appreciated the opportunity of making
good even at this point!
The nun in the story only got back
her position, but Peter was advanced
from being a “fisher of men" to be¬
ing a shepherd of the flock of God,
who shall receive the “crown of
glory,” and a martyr, who shall re¬
ceive the “crown of life.” With what
new meaning may we sing; "He re
storeth my soul!”
Those Who Seek the Lord.
And they that know thy name will
put their trust in tliee; for tliou.
Lord, hast not forsaken them that
seek thee.—Psalm 9:10.
vent in France.
heart went
out to a soldier
she nursed; she
left the convent
and in Paris fell
Into a life of sin.
After years she
crept back to the
convent steps to
die. She was tak¬
en in and nursed
back to health,
when 1 o! she
found another
had filled her
place in the con¬
Had Your
Iron Today t
That Luscious
Raisin Toast!
A NEW delicious breakfast bread. Full
fruited raisin toast! A new delight for
the entire family.
Made with big, plump, tender, seeded
raisins—Sun-Maid brand.
The raisin flavor permeates each slice.
You car. get such bread from any grocer or
bake shop if you insist. No need to bake at
home.
Once try it and you’ll always have this kind.
You’ll serve it at least twice a week.
Fine food for business men and children
due to the energizing nutriment and the iron
of this famous, healthful fruit.
Make dainty bread pudding with left-over
slices. No need to waste a crumb.
Order now for tomorrow’s breakfast. But
be sure to say you want “one of those full
fruited raisin loaves.”
Sun-Maid
Seeded Raisins
Make delicious bread, pies, puddings,
cakes, etc. Ask your grocer for them. Send
for free book of tested recipes.
Sun-Maid Raisin Growers
Membership 13,000
Dept N-10-6, Fresno, Calit.
Blue Package
Practically All. ,
Governor Allen of Kansas, who V
an ardent and discreet book collector,
was criticizing the work of a western
novelist.
“The man’s early work was good,"
lie said, “but his work today is
wretched. Literature once, It is now
mere potboiling trash. of'
“This writer’s case is the ease
practically all our writers. They be¬
gin with a wealth of thought and
they end wlth*a thought of wealth."
Healthy, Happy
Babies
The best way to keep baby
in crowing, contented health
is Mrs. Winslow’s Syrup. This
safe, pleasant, effective reme¬
dy regulates the bowels and
quickly flatulency, overcomes diarrhoea,
colic, constipation,
and teething troubles. |
MRS.
WINSLOW’S
SYRUP
Thtlnfants* and Ckildrtn’s Regulator
is best for baby. Guaranteed free
f4bm narcotics, opiates, alcohol
and all harmful ingredients. Open
formula on every label.
At all Druggitti
Write for free booklet of letter* from
prateful mother*.
Anglo-American
Drug Co.
215-217 Fulton St
New York
Gin. Harold Silling F. Hitch* Ag*nt»:
A C*.. In*.
"Good
to the
Last
Drop'
MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
r Silso fMiaavell fHoitseTea
CHEEK NEALCOFFEE CQ
9 -stsHVIUE HOUSTON .,AC»^\vCtf-«CKvGI»:7 \C*TC PM
KODAKERS
Films Developed 10c — Packs 20c
Prints 3c, 4c and he. . StaAips, accepted.
High gloss finish. One day service.
Doyle C. Knight, Box 189, Dublin, Ga.
KING PIN
PLUG TOBACCO
Known as
“that good kind"
Try will it—and know why you
MEN OVER 18; COMMON EDUCATION,
$135-$190 monthly. Railway mall and other
government Stewart, .positions. List free. George
5-C, Columbus Circle, New York.
AGENTS—Sell master furniture and auto¬
mobile poiish; used in White House, Wash¬
ington. ington. Big Big comm. comm. Walsh's Walsh's Protecpolish, Protecpi
Inc.. 4302 N. Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
SWEET DREAMS wos ^r3 (Ever Made •t MEDY
Liberal Bottle* 35c SOLD EVERYWHERE
New Hair to replace old,
sbosld be grow¬
ing It will all the if time.
you
Tonic bald, Q-fi&p Q-Ban Hair It's
—Don’t get get an today today — —
much direct more pleasant. At all good drifgglsts, 73c,
or from HESSId - ELLIS, CkmtAt, Te*s,
PEAS, PEAS—SOUND, Brabhams $2.25; RECLEANED mixed .SELECTED
$2; new, strong
2 4-bushel bags. F. -H. McCrae, Denmark, S.C.
W. N. U„ ATLANTA, No! 25-1922.