Newspaper Page Text
"CASCARETS” FOR LIVER
AND BOWELS—10c A BOX
Don’t Stay Dizzy, BJiious, Headachy,
Sick or Constipated.
M
— —- ST
doesn’t sicken you like pills, oils, calo¬
mel and salts. Tastes nice—acts won¬
derful. Sold at drug stores.
HEALS RUNNING SORES
"I feel it my duty to write you a
letter of thanks for your wonderful
Peterson’s Ointment. I had a running
sore on my left leg for one year. 3
began to use Peterson’s Ointment three
weeks ago and now it is healed.”—A.
C. Gilbrath, 703 Reed St., Erie, Pa.
For years I have been selling through
druggists a large box of PETERSON'S
OINTMENT for 35 cents. The healing
power in this ointment is marvelous.
Eczema goes in a few days. Old sores
heal up like magic; piles that other
remedies do not seem to even relieve
are speedily conquered. Pimples and
nasty blackheads disappear In a week
and the distress of chafing goes in a
few minutes. Mail orders filled Per
terson Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y.
He Saw the Devil
Claude, age six, was playing in a
garage. He came .pellmell Into the
house, crying hysterically, declaring
between sobs that the devil was in
the machine.
On investigation, an owl was found
perched on the back seat. It had evi¬
dently gotten there the night before,
when the machine was left standing
in a country road. "
WILL STOP THAT
Don’t let chronic colds and coughs
lead to serious trouble. Lung-A-Tone
will stop either almost Immediately.
Made from creosote, wild cherry bark
and extract of cod liver oil. it Is the
greatest lun£ disinfectant and tissue
builder known. Lung-A-Tone prevents
coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia
and other forms of'Throat and lung
trouble. Ask your druggist for a bottle
today. Tt will stop your cough or cold
by tomorrow. Made by Maladlne La¬
boratories, Atlanta, On.—Adv.
Other Fellows’ Prosperity
Jud Tun kins says prosperity nearly
always seems like something some
-othep of.—Washington fellow has more thftn his share
Star.
Nothing’s so hard but search will
find it put.
Hall’s Catarrh
MasISaSma If&Vf&AVllie >s a Combined
Treatment,both
local and internal, and ha? been success
ful in the treatment of Catarrh for over
forty years. Sold by all druggists.
F. J. CHENEY St CO., Toledo, Ohio
m/mm TOmiGHT
Tomorrow Alright
KEEPING WELL -An ffl Tablet
(a vegetable aperient) taken at
night will help keep you well, by
toning and strengthening your di¬
gestion and elimination.
Used fir over
30 'OVears “
Get «
25'Btw
Chips off 4he Old Block
N? JUNIORS—Little W»
Ona-third the regular dose. Made
of the same ingredient*, then candy
coated. For children and adulta.
mem SOLD BY YOUR DRUGCISTonml
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tense
Stops Malaria, Restores |
Strength and Energy, eoc
Baby A Bath Loves With
Cuticura
JB^n^and^ooth!ngjtVreiidflj^kin«j Soap _
| a
PARKER’S
K HAIR BALSAM
[ Remove Restores s Dan am ff-S Color tops Hair and Fall fag
I Beauty to Gray and Faded Hail
60c. and $1.00 at PaLcb Dnunrista. N.
fttaeox Chem. Wks. or up. T.
Hf^OERCORNS Removes Corns, C&I* the
louse*, etc., stops all pain, ensures isurea comfort comfoi to
feet, makes walking easy. ISe. ._by I mai 1 or at Drug*
gist* H isoox Chemical Works, Varies, l Fatcfcogue, J H. Y,
Buy Concord Yams
direct from manufacturer at a big saving.
Spun from long combed wool. Write for free
samples. Many beautiful shades and heather
mixtures. 50c per 4-oz. skein; 92.00 per lb.
Postage paid on all orders. CONCORD WOR~
STED MILLS, Dept. 473, West Concord, N. H,
Peel fine! Let
"Cascarets” clean
your bowels and
stimulate your
liver. No griping
or overacting. Mil¬
lions of men,
women, and chil¬
dren take this
harmless laxa¬
tive-cathartic. It
TO MAKEWHITEFACE
BRICK AT GORDON
CONSTRUCTION WILL START JAN¬
UARY 1 ON FIRST SUCH
PLANT ERECTED SOUTH
STATE NEUMF INTEREST
Newsy Paragraphs Gathered Through¬
out The State For The Benefit
Of Our Readers
Atlanta.—What promises to be a
new era in the industrial development
of the state is marked by the organi¬
zation of the Georgia White Brick com
pany, a half million dollar corpora
tion, for the manufacture of white
face brick.
The company’s plant—the first of
its kind in the South—will be located
at Gordon, where a site and clay de
posits covering three hundred acres
have been purchased. Construction of
a plant., modern in every particular,
will start January 1, and it is ex
pected that production will commence
the first of May. The company will
have one hundred and twenty-five em¬
ployees and all of them will be local
people, except the superintendent,
who must be men experienced in the
industry.
The initial unit will produce forty
thousand brick per day..and the ma¬
chinery will have a capacity of three
times that amount. Equipment of the
latest model will be installed. Ma¬
chines will be operated by elcetric
power generation at the plant by oil
burning engines. The tunnel type of
kiln will be used. The equipment
will cost in the neighborhood of three
hundred thousand dollars. The plant
will be located on the tracks of the
Central of Georgia railway, just to
the west of Gordon.
The announcement comes from W.
F. Demuth, who will he president of
the new company and who is one of
the best known brick manufacturers
in the country. Doctor Demuth and
others interested with him in the or
ganization of the Georgia White-Face
Brick company are connected with the
Canotn Brick and Fireproofing com¬
pany. This is the second largest face
brick manufacturing plant in the Unit¬
ed States, owning and operating plants
at Canton, Newcomerstown, Midvale
and Robertsvllle, Ohio, as well as sev¬
eral coal mines in that state. Their
plants are now turning out seventy
million brick per year.
The plant at Gordon will he the
only one south of the Ohio and Poto¬
mac rivers manufacturing white face
brick. It will specialize in this va¬
riety and will also manufacture grays,
buffs and mingled shades. The suc¬
cess of the project seems assured by
the fact that the South now uses fifty
million light colored face brick each
year, all of which must be brought
from the Nortii. There is (also a
large export market open in Cuba,
Central America and South America,
as light colored face brick is in de¬
mand everywhere for hotels, office
buildings, apartment houses aJnd resi¬
dences.
The brick will be manufactured un¬
der a formula by R, T. Stull, ceramic
engineer, who is assistant general in¬
dustrial agent of the Central of Geor¬
gia railway. Mr. Stull was formerly
chief ceramist of the United States
bureau of mines, and had personal di¬
rection of the research woTk in Geor¬
gia clays done by the bureau for the
central of Georgia.
Japanese Slayer Cleared By Jury
Atlanta.—W. K. Abbey, Japanese
proprietor of Nikko Inn, was acquit¬
ted of the murder of Dillard Moore, 17
year-old Atlanta youth. The little Jap¬
anese received the verdict with tears
in bis eyes. When the verdict had
been read, and the words of “not
guilty” had reached him, he arose and
started in the direction of the jurors,
apparently to thank them. He was
stopped by a court bailiff. Thirty min¬
utes before the verdict was returned,
the jury asked to be re-cbarged on the
law regarding “robbery.” One of the
jurors asked Judge G. H. Howard to
give an opinion as to whether or not
a “man was within his rights if he
shot a person who had robbed him and
was fleeing.” The judge replied that
he could not render an opinion, and
proceeded to deliver a formal charge
on "robbery.”
Many Hogs Killed In Chattooga
Summerville.—Many unusually fine
hogs have been slaughtered in this sec¬
tion during the past few days, due to
the favorable weather conditions. Chat¬
tooga county is now one of the leading
hog-raising counties of the state, the
old scrub hog having been replaced
by thoroughbred stocks. Formerly the
average porker weighed between one |
hundred and one hundred and fifty I
pounds, but now they range as high :
as seven hundred pounds.
Scratch Of Pin Causes Death
Athens.—A pin scratch caused the
death here of Miss Nannie Lou Cal¬ I
loway, young school teacher of Wilkes !
county. Miss Calloway died in a local I
hospital of blood poisoning which set ]
in as a result of the scratch. Sev¬
eral days ago she was playing with
some of the girls of her school, and ‘
in some manner stuck a pin in her
chest, from which blood poisoning re¬ !
sulted. Blood hardly flowed from j
the slight prick at the time, but in¬ !
fection set in and she was rushed to
an Athens hospital. |
CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVKI-AN" OEOrgta.
Optimistic About Peach Crop
Macon.—“Georgia could easily have
marketed twenty thousand cars of
peaches this year, instead of the little
over fourteen thousand cars, if the har¬
vesting season had extended over a
longer period,” said W. B. Baker, pres¬
ident of the Atlantic Ice and Coal
corporation, here. “As it happened,
markets became glutted; thousands of
cars of fruit had to be allowed to de¬
cay. We realized then that greater
icing facilities were needed, for per¬
haps in the years to come the mar¬
kets will consume twenty thousand
cars in a season. The new ice plant
at Fort Valley," continued Itaker, “will
be large enough to ice one thousand
cars in a day, if necessary. The
greatest icing record established at the
Macon plant was six hundred cars in
one day.”
Peach Growers See Airplane Dusting
Montezuma.—A demonstration of
dusting cotton and peach trees by the
use of airplane was given at Monte¬
zuma the other day. This demonstra¬
tion was held on the plantations of
Jule Felton and Chastain brothers. To
the peach growers it seemed a feasible
proposition. The peach growers of
Macon county have always been
heavy users of dust for summer con¬
trol of insects and plant diseases, and
if the airplane dusting proves practi¬
cable it will further relieve the labor
shortage which hits been felt in this
section since the general exodus of
negroes.
29 Indictments Against Brokers
Atlanta.—Just 24 hours after the
federal court for the northern district
of Georgia had refused to enjoin So¬
licitor General John A. Boykin from
prosecuting them, managers and em¬
ployees of four New York and New
Orleans brokerage concerns were In¬
dicted by the Fulton county grand
jury at its session recently on charges
of violating the Georgia law prohibit¬
ing dealing in cotton futures on mar¬
gins. Twenty-nine true bills were re
turned during one day, bringing the
total number of indictments past the
hundred niark.
Refuses To Expunge Insanity Hearing
Columbus.—Probate Judga Boat wick
refused to expunge from the court rec¬
ords insanity proceedings brought
against Charles “Chic”. Harley, former
star football player as asked for in a
motion filed by counsel for Harley,
who now lives in Chicago. Harley was
sent to the Dayton state hospital, De¬
cember 2, 1922, and discharged the
next year. The motion asserted he
was a citizen of Chicago at the time,
and that the Franklin county court
had no jurisdiction in his case. He
further charged fraud in his commit¬
ment.
Auto Accident Fatal To Young Man
Augusta. — Brigham Goodbee of
Waynesboro received fatal injuries
when an automobile he was driving
turned turtle on the Mtlledge road
several miles from Augusta. Accord¬
ing to information received here, Good
bee with several other young men
were corning towards Augusta and in
an effort to pass another car lost
control of the machine which left the
road, turning over several times. He
was pinned under the car and received
injuries from which he died a short
time afterward.
Bauxite Deposits Will Be Developed
Macon.—The Kalbfleisch corporation,
of New York has obtained approxi¬
mately three thousand acres of land
pear Toomsboro, in Wilkinson county,
to develop the mineral resources of
that county, according to a story print¬
ed in the Macon Telegraph. 'The prop¬
erty at first was acquired by the H.
C. Parker company of Toomsboro, it
is stated, but now has passed into the
hands of the New York firm. Owners
are to receive royalties, it is stated,
from the sale of products manufac¬
tured.
George To Inpsect Beach At Tybee
Washington.—Upon the invitation of
the mayor of Savannah, Ga., the mayor
of Tybee and the citizens of both
places, Senator George will visit Sa¬
vannah and Tybee just after Christ¬
mas to make a personal inspection of
the condition of the beach at Tybee
and to look into the matter of Fort
Screven, which fort is included in the
bill introduced by Senator Wadsworth
for sale of government properties.
Sylvester Elects Officers
Sylvester.—At the city election, held
here J. D. Hall was re-elected coun¬
cilman and L. D. Shell was elected to
succeed James McGirt, who has serv¬
ed as councilman continuously for six¬
teen years, but did not offer for re
election. N, M. Rhodes and B. L. Saw¬
yer were elected tax assessors.
Savannah Marks Roads
Savannah.—Yellow arrows bearing
directions and distances will be put up
along every chief highway/ entering
Savannah, as the streets of the city
and now thus marked.
Three Ware County Boys Convicted
Waycross.—A verdict of guilty car
rymg a sentence of from 15 to 20
years in the penitentiary, was returned
by a jury in the Ware superior court
in the case of three Ware county
white boys, Harvey and Mark Thomp¬
son and Charlie Arnold, charged with
assault upon a white girl near Fairfax
one afternoon recently. The case had
been one of the most sensational of its
kind ever tried in the Ware court, and
considerable interest was aroused here
over the outcome. The entire day
was consumed in heraing testimony
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SundaySchool 1 Lesson T
(By REV. P. R. FITZWATER, D.D.. Dean
of the the Evening Evening School, School, Moody Moody Bible Bible In In
etitute of Chicago.)
(©, 1324, Western Newspaper Unton.)
Lesson for December 21
CHRISTMAS LESSON—GOD’S GIFT
TO THE WORLD
LESSON TEXT—John 1:1-18; 3:16-21.
GOLDEN TEXT—“For God so loved
the world, that He gave His only be¬
gotten Son, that whosoever believeth
In Him should not perish, but have
eternal life.”—John 3:15.
PRIMARY TOPIC—The Birth of
Jesus.
JUNIOR TOPIC—The Gift of God’a
Love.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR
TOPIC—Why Christ Came to Earth.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—The World's Need of Christ.
The lesson committee has suggest¬
ed alternative lessons for today, name¬
ly : “The Conversion of Zaccliaeus”
or “God's Gift to the World.” Since
we so rarely get a Christmas lesson
from the Gospel of John, it Is most
fitting that we avail ourselves of this
opportunity.
I. The Declaration of God (John
1:14-18).
1. By Whom (v. 14) ? The Word.
The historic person Jesus Christ is
called the Word of God because He Is
tiie expression of God to men. The
eternal God has declared himself in
Jesus Christ. Observe:
(1) That Jesus Christ is a person,
separate and distinct from the Father,
yet there exists an Inseparable union
between them (v. 1).
(2) He is eternal (v. 2). He was
with God in the beginning. He did
not begin to exist when the heavens
and the earth were created. He was
before all tilings (Col. 1:17).
(3) lie is God (v. 1). He is not
only a being equal with God but one
In essence with Him.
(4) He Is tlie omnipotent Creator
(v. 3) by whom were all things made,
the world and nil things therein.
(5) lie is the Source of all life
(v. 4). He is the eternal fountain
from which all life has been derived.
All living beings have derived their
life from Him—are dependent upon
Him for the maintenance of life.
(t!) He is the Light of men (v. 4).
The light of reason came from Him.
2. How Made (v. 14).
Bln, man who was made in the
ness and image of God, lost
edge and touch with God. The
preme need, therefore, was a
revelation, one he could touch
handle, that is, verify with the
I’li Is was done through the
of the Word. Jesus Christ Is not
merely a representative of God, but
He is absolutely and essentially God.
It was the eternal \Yord who became
flesh. In the virgin birth of Christ
God became Incorporated with hu¬
manity. He did not merely become a
Jew. He was the "Son of Man.” His
relation ts racial.
8. The Witnesses (vv. 15-17).
(1) The Baptist (v. 15). John the
Baptist was the herald of the eternal
Word who was the revealer of God.
(2) John the Evangelist and His
Fellow Disciples (v. 10). Their expe¬
rience of God’s grace of salvation was
the proof of the coming of God’s rep¬
resentative.
4. The Need (v. 18). Sinful man
(vas blind, therefore could not per¬
ceive God. If man was ever to know
God, God must adapt Himself to man’s
need.
II. The Supreme Reason Why God
Revealed Himself (John 8:10-21).
1. Ills Great Love (v. 10). Pri¬
marily God’s boundless affection
moved Him to reveal Himself as the
Savior of men. Concerning this sal¬
vation note:
(1) Its origin. “God so loved the
world.” It proceeded out of the lov¬
ing heart of God.
(2) Its ground. “He gave His only
begotten son.” Man’s salvation rests
upon the death of Christ.
(3) Its recipients. “Whosoever be¬
lieveth." That means whosoever in
any age, race or dime receives Jesus
Christ is saved.
(4) How appropriated. "Believeth
on Him.” This great salvation, which
proceeded from the loving heart of
God, Is offered to whosoever will take
It on the simple condition of receiving
tt.
(5) Its effects.
a. It issues in eternal life. Christ
fs the source of life. Those who re¬
ceive Him are made partakers in that
life. Therefore all who are in Christ
have eternal life.
b. It saves from perishing. Those
who accept Jesus Christ are eternally
saved.
2. The World's Great Need (w.
17-21). The world was under condem¬
nation. It was without help to save
itself. Christ, the great Savior and
Deliverer, did not come to condemn
the world. Its unbelief and rebellion
placed It under condemnation.
Let Us Shine
There are enough gloomy hearts in
the world. Let us shine for the Lord
Jesus.—M. G. H.
It Is Easier
It is always easier to discuss the
duties of others than to do our own,
—John G. Whittier.
Can See Gates of Heaven
When a man stands by faith on the
Bible, he can easily see the gates of
Christian Advocate
MOTHER!
Baby's Best Laxative is
“California Fig Syrup"
When baby is constipated, lias wind
colic, feverish breath, coated-tongue,
or diarrhea, a half-teaspoonful of genu¬
ine “California Fig Syrup” promptly
moves the poisons, gases, bile, souring
food and waste right out. Never
cramps or overacts. Babies love its
delicious taste.
Ask your druggist for genuine "Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup” which lias full direc¬
tions for infants in arms, and children
of all ages, plainly printed on bottle.
Mother! You must say “California”
or you may get an imitation fig syrup.
New Definition
Little Henry was visiting ids grand¬
parents in Princeton. He came rush¬
ing into the house one morning and
asked: “Grandma, has grandpa get
a sawdust pump?”
An auger was the instrument lie had
in mind—Indianapolis News.
Indigestion produces disagreeable and
sor ometimes alarming symptoms. Wright’
Indian Vegetable Pills remove,symptoms removes and
restore digestion. 372 372 Pearl Pearl St., St., N, N. Y. Y. Adv.
Toush Luck
First Suburbanite—1 understand my
daughter sang at your house last
night.
Second Suburbanite—Yes, and she
ruined her chances with my son, too.
—Houston Post.
The Household and Veterinary Remedy
for 78 years is Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh.
For Cuts, Sores, Galls, etc., to prevent
Gangrene. Antiseptic, healing. 3 sizes.—Adv.
No Diplomas Issued
No wan graduates from the school
of experience. It is a life course,
Waffle# make them in half the
time with seif-rising flour
2 1 cup tablespoons sweet milk butter (melted) 1
2 \% tablespoons seif-rising sugar flour
WP*
* £ will take more mixtures. moisture; if Some the batter flours are looks drier thick than or heavy, others and add
a little more sweet milk. A heavy batter will not moke c crisp,
tender waffle.
A took of delightful send recipes fa* b offer
ed below; for your jtpy
TOU’LL never be disappointed with the golden
J- Y crusted waffles you make with self-rising flour.
Something about them makes them better than
most waffles—-far more tender and light and tempting.
They are the ideal treat for any meal ’most any time.
EVC! very one who loves good home-cooked foods will find
re: al fun in making self-rising flour waffles. It’s no trick at
all to mix up a bit of batter, heat the waffle iron and sup¬
ply a hungry family with this delicious, wholesome food.
The reason the self-rising flour makes (the such good waffles is be¬
cause phosphate pure baking rising powder) ingredients kind used in the best
are already mixed in pure soft
wheat flout—just enough to make the waffle batter puff
up light and fluffy. For This means that self-rising you can’t flour go wrong
on ideal your flour mixing. for this reason is the
to use biscuits, muffins, pastries and cakes.
In number buying of self-rising different flour remember plain that flour. it is The sold in a
determines grades just as The Blue Shield of price the
you pay the grade.
Soft healthful, Wheat Millers’ Association dependable on a flour. bag guarantees
you wholesome,
SOFT WHEAT MILLERS’ ASSN., Inc.. NASHVILLE, TENN.
n SELFRISING
Healthful Dependable HOW
Economical
MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE
"loft Wheat
Millers’ Association, Inc. The contents are absolutely
pure and wholesome and comply with all Pure Food Laws.
If you are not satisfied with your baking resuita, the
Association will cheerfully refund your money.
____________________ This toe
Gel Book ofKecipes
Home Economics Dept.
Soft Wheat Millers > Assn., Inc., Nashville, Tenn.
e Chls recipe book Send your FREE book "Fifty IVays to Use
handsomely illus¬ , Self-Rising Flour” to:
trated, gives 50
Ways to save time N*me
in cooking.
Aridreas
& 1924 S W M A f Write or print name and address plainly)
FREE To Send we and will POSTPAID Housewives u« your send name you a 10cent .FREE and
bottle of LIQUID VENEER. Wonderful for
your daily dueting. Cleans.duets and polishes
with one sweep of your dust cloth. Renews pi¬
anos, fvfrnitu re, wood work, automobiles. Makes
everything look like new. Makes du tting a
pleasure.
Sold by
Hardware,furni¬
ture, drug, paint.
general LIQUID Buffalo. COMPANY stores. VENEER K.Y. mm
WOOL HIDES TALLOW
CHICKENS WAX HONEY
Writnuf wilft 2bsr our paying prices.
D. KIRK LAND, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
Established 1875
RESINOL
Clears 5oofhinq Away and Blotches He&linq
CURESUJIDS ~LA GRIPPE
VvZ4-Jiowa —ttSm&tyllNINE- in 3 Ztaij9
Standard cold remedy world over. Demand
box bearing Mr. Hill’s portrait and signature.
/ion At All Druggists — 30 Cents
Rubber Sleeve Protectors—Something needed
by every housewife, clerk, storekeeper, me¬
chanic and in fact by everybody interested
in protecting their sleeves. Pure gum rubber
in colors grey, blue, red, green and plum.
Price 60c pair postp’d. Stamps not accepted.
State color wanted. Byington Sales Agency,
Rm. 500, .154 Nassau, New York. Agents wtd.
PATENTS 1 Bend model or drawing rorex
,ruination. alts Highest Ue £; refert
8
Booklot FEHB. Patent
Hundreds of Women
Are Making Money
selling - Life Insurance. If you are In¬
terested, write me.
It. F. SHEDDEN, Manager
Mutual Life liiMiirnnee Company of
New York. $705,000,000.00.
,GXnnt Building. Atlanta, Ga.
W. N. U., ATLANTA. NO. 51-1924.
Coeds Outdo Men
Of the 08 students recently awarded
highest scholastic honors at the Uni¬
versity of California 26 were „ C1C men and
42 were women, according to the New
I York Herald-Tribune.