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Had Tour
Iron Today?
Toast It—
Delicious Raisin Bread
JL/ pvO family: this some Serve morning hot raisin and surprise break¬ the
toast at
fast, made from full-fruited, luscious raisin
bread. Let your husband try it with his cof¬
fee. Hear what he says.
Your grocer or bake shop can supply the
proper bread. No need to bake at home.
Made with big, plump, tender, seeded Sun
Maid Raisins, and if you get the right kind
there’s a generous supply of these delicious
fruit-meats in it.
Insist on this full-fruited bread and you’ll
have luscious toast.
Rich in energizing nutriment and iron
great food for business men.
Make most attractive bread pudding with
left-over slices. There’s real economy in bread
like this.
Try tomorrow morning. A real surprise.
Telephone your dealer to send a loaf today.
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-10-12, Fresno, Calif,
Blue Package
Face to face the truth comes out.
Don’t Forget Cutieura Talcum
When adding to your toilet requisites.
An exquisite face, skin, baby and dust¬
ing powder and perfume, rendering
other. perfumes superfluous. You may
rely on it because one of the Cutieura
Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum).
25c each everywhere.—Advertisement.
Conscientious.
At ; one o’clock in the morning the
conscientious Smith college freshman
tiptoed downstairs and knocked loud¬
ly on the housemother’g door. Grab¬
bing kimono and slippers in great
haste the housemother ran to the door
to see what all the excitement was
about. A loud knock at 1 a. in. surely
meant nothing less than a Are. “Oh,
Mrs. Henry,’’ said the conscientious
freshman excitedly. “I sneezed a
coupfe of times and think I must he
getting a cold. You know Doctor Gil¬
man said in hygiene lecture that the
minute we felt a cold coming on we
must tell tlie housemother about it!"
All Settled.
Wife—John, if Mrs. Nexdore gets a
new shit,this fall I must have one also.
Hub—Well, my dear, don't worry
about that. Naybor and X formed a
protective union today and neither of
you is to have one.—Boston Tran¬
script.
Ton will find in Postum
a delightful and satisfying mealtime
beverage, with no element which can
harm nerves and digestion—or cause
wakeful nights and dull days.
Your grocer has Postum in two forms: Instant
Postum (in tins) made instantly in the cup by the
addition of boiling water. Postum Cereal (in pack¬
ages of larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the
drink while the meal is being prepared) made by
boiling for fully 20 minutes.
Made by
Postum Cereal Co., Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.
Lettonia Called “Singing Nation.”
“The Singing Nation" is the name
often applied to Lettonia, home of the
' Letts. The Letts derive the title of
“singing nation" from their common
; devotion to vocal music.
For seven centuries the Lett^ suf¬
fered subjection from the German
barons, who formed a haughty arid
firmly entrenched caste of nobility, but
despite this oppression the vitality of
the Letts was such that, they survived.
Since the abolition" of serfdom in Rus¬
sia, in 1800, they have advanced in
, (here
education ami economics", arid
has been middle-class^ a growth of,wealthy and ,cul¬
tured people.
Grammar Doesn't Improve.
With all the money spent on public
education the standard of public
speech does not soeirito improve much.
At a -recent hall , game when a man
fainted the announce/ paraded, in
front of tlie grandstand calling loud¬
ly, “Are there a doctor in tlie audi¬
ence?" At the circus the ballyhoo man
for the tattooed advised the world,
“Have your work did here.” And the
police department still paints on the
: streets, “Drive careful.” — Detroit
News,
Have You Read Yours?
“Is your house insured against fire?”
“I don’t know, I’ve just been reading
over tlie insurance?policy.”
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND. GEORGIA.
STATE ITEMS
CONDENSED
Dalton.—The Board of Tax Equal¬
izers, in session here, has completed
the work for the year. As a result
of the work tax values have been in¬
creased $121,254 over the returns
made by tax payers. Tax Receiver
Deck is busy on the digest, and the
tax gain is expected to be a substan¬
tial one.
Swainsboro. — Emanuel county ship
ped its first car of watermelons re¬
cently. The melons were grown by
C. J. Brown at Canoochee, Ga., and
averaged twenty-six pounds. They
will be handled through the Middle
Georgia Melon Growers’ association,
which organized in this county some
time ago.
Atlanta.—A polo team will he form¬
ed by members of the local troop of
the Georgia cavalry, according to an
announcement by R. M. Striplln, who
sold the troop all of the horses brought
to Atlanta from Arizona by Cheyenne
Kiser for the rodeo staged at Lake
wood during the Progress and Pros¬
perity Week celebration.
Columbus.—Bryant Toole, taxi driv¬
er, jointly indicted with Sergeant J.
B. Kimball on charges of complicity
in connection with the bombing of the
home of Mayor J. Homer Dimmon on
the night of May 21, will be arraigned
for trial soon according to an an¬
nouncement made by Solicitor General
C. Frank McLaughlin, counsel for the
state.
Atlanta.—Informal talks, indorsing
and encouraging the directors of the
Cotton association, were made at their
luncheon by W. W. Banks, vice presi¬
dent of the Citizens and Southern bank,
and Hatton B. Rogers, vice president
of the Fourth National bank, members
of an advisory board appointed by the
Atlanta Clearing House association.
The bankers assured the cotton grow¬
ers of the entire approval of the banks
of the Sapiro plan.
Griffin.—Continued dry weather has
been beneficial to crops generally and
to cotton especially. Cotton patches
onw have the appearance of good cul¬
tivation and as long as the price of
the staple remains above 20 cents
there is little doubt that cotton plant¬
ers will fight the weevil. Another
crop which the present weather has
favored is peaches. The orchards
near Griffin will begin shipping in
carloads in a few days. The crop is
unusually heavy.
Dalton.—Preliminary steps were
taken toward organization of another
cotton tnill company here, when Dal¬
ton capitalists and business men met
C. E. M„pLin, cotton mill man of Rome,
and appointed a committee to obtain
a site, apply for a charter and take
all other steps necessary until formal
organization can be perfected and of¬
ficers named. The new corporation
will start With a capital stock of
$150,000 paid in, and will be known
as McLin Textile company.
Powder Springs.—What is said to
be the largest swimming pool in the
state of Georgia witji the exception of
those in Atlanta, will be completed
here during the week and will be
officially opened July 4, according to
the plans of T. N. Camp, prominent
resident of this city. The pool which
will hold nearly half a million gallons
of water, will be 250 feet long and
100 feet wide. It will range from four
inches to tefi feet in depth. The* cost
of ereotion is estimate dat $10,000.
Macon.—The Flora American Ply¬
wood company, one of the largest in¬
dustrial plants in Macon, valued during
the world war at more than $500,000,
wag sold at public auction. Harry C.
Fowler, president of the Case-Fowler
Lumber company, bid $80,000 for the
plant. The sale is yet to be confirmed,
but this is the highest bid made for
the property. The plant formerly em¬
ployed about 500 people, but for the
past twelve months, it has been idle
most of the time. The comany went
Into bankruptcy some months ago.
Atlanta.—Mrs. James L. Key, wife
of Atlanta’s mayor and prominent
church and social worker, revealed the
details of an effort of four months’
duration to save a yot©g English
woman from deportation from Amer¬
ica. The case has attracted the atten¬
tion of the federal department of jus
tfee, the bureau of immigration, the
British consul at Savannah, and Con¬
gressman W. D. Upshaw, of the Fifth
Georgia district. The woman’s name
is Jennie Crawford, and she Is about
thirty-four years old.
Atlanta.—Judge George L. Bell, in
the Fulton superior court, recently
signed an order permanently enjoin¬
ing J. J. Brown, state commissioner of
agriculture, from collecting inspecticn
fees on kerosene, gasoline, or other
petroleum products Imported into this
state, and intended to be sold in the
original package, but dissolved all re¬
straining orders hitherto issued hold¬
ing up collection of inspection fees on
products shipped into the state for
indefinite storage or for sale after
breaking the original package.
Atlanta.—The railroad commission
recently granted the request of the
Georgia Railway and Power company
for a postponement of the commission’s
rule nisi requiring the company to
show' cause on July 25 why its gas rate
should not be reduced. This action by
the commission was based upon a rul¬
ing by Judge E. J. Reagan, the com¬
mission’s legal adviser, to the effect
that an inquiry into the gas rates at
•his time, while the rates are pending
before the United States supreme court
would be both illegal and improper.
The Young Mother.
THE ILES OF INFANTS AND CHILDREN should be so well known to the
youngest of mothers that a reminder or a repetition of the symptoms of illness
seems unnecessary, yet there are some mothers who overlook a feverish condition,
a little colic, or a disposition to be irritable. If not corrected they may lead to
serious sickness. And to correct them, to bring Baby back to its happy self, is
so easy by the use of Castoria—a medicine prepared just for infants and children.
It will regulate the bowels (not force them), aid digestion and so bring quiet and rest.
Fletcher’s Castoria has been doing this for over 30 years; regulating the
stomach and bowels of infants and children. It has replaced the nauseating Castor
Oil, so-called Soothing Svrnps, poisonous Paregoric and other vicious concoctions
in the homes of true ana honest mothers—mothers who love their children.
Those mothers will give their babies foods and medicines especially prepared
for infants and children.
Children Cry For
[EPPS®
ALCOHOL-0 PER GENT.
AVeietable Preparation for As ■
J , Re£ula
jj similatin^theFood by
tingthcStomadiS A Word About Truth.
IN FAN TS /CmiPBM Great Is Truth, and mighty above
j DI4es1ioit! aU things.” So says the Old
Thereby Promoting Testament, yet it is equally true to-day. Truth shows no favors,
i Cheerfulness and Rest Contains fears no enemies.
fitter ____________
From the inception of. Fletcher’s Castoria, Truth has been the
5 vllneraL Not nahg watchword, and to the conscientious adherence to this motto in the
preparation of Fletcher's Castoria as well as in its advertising is due
the secret of its popular demand.
Senna, Salts All imitations, aU substitutes, all just-as-good preparations lack
/bycKflli St*d
m, e the element of Truth, lack the righteousness of being, lack all sem¬
blance even in the words of those who would deceive.
CUtriMSegar ffofrryrrtn flaw t And you I Mothers, mothers with the fate of the World in your
K| ■ hands, can you be deceived? Certainly not.
fef Fletcher's Castoria is prepared for Infants and Children. It is
Feverishness and distinctly a remedy for the litjle-ones. The BABY’S need for a med¬
li and icine to take the place of Castor Oil, Paregoric and Soothing Syrups
jlpl |k rcsulhA^ Skjnawreo* was BABY’S the sole troubles thought with that a medicine led to its discovery. that you would Never use try for to yourself. correct
Fac-Simile MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUto EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA
in r IHE GBOTAOnCOHPffl* GENUINE CASTORIA always
1 NEW YQR h. _ r -
m Al 6 «*« rulers Bears the Signature of
i+®, ■ 35 Bose*
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
10 Cents PUTNAM Gives Cheerful FADELESS New DYES—dyes Color Tone or to tints 0!d as Curtains you wish
To be commiserated is the man who To cultivate a genial face one i Every one should have something to
tries to*contribute more than ids share should get himself placed on a "solicit- do,, ''something to love, something to
of the applause. ing committee. hope for.
Tell untruths recklessly—and be un¬ Any man may forget to wind his I He who takes time by the forelock
popular. Tell the truth recklessly watch, but the flight of time goes on is the only one Who realizes that time
and he equally so. just the same. ] Is money.
2 or 3 Cans of
Baking Powder
Are Not Worth the Price of One
If they are the “big can and cheap” kind
because they may mean baking failures
THAT’S WHY
CALUMET
The Economy POWDER BAKING
Is the biggest selling brand In t he wo rld
Don't let a BIG CAN
or a very low price mis¬
lead you.
Experimenting with an
uncertain brand is ex¬
pensive — because it
WASTES time and
money. J BEST BY TEST
The World’s Greatest Baking Powder