Newspaper Page Text
BOWELS
need watching
Let Dr. Caldwell help whenever your
child is feverish or upset; or has
caught simple cold. prescription will make
His
that comfortable, bilious, headachy, happy, cross well boy in just or
girl few hours. It restores the
a soon
bowels to healthy regularity. It helps
“break-up” a cold by keeping ^sickening the
bowels free from all that
mucus waste.'
You have a famous doctor’s word
for this laxative. Dr. Caldwell’s record
of having attended over 3500 births
without loss of one mother or baby
is believed unique in American
medic al history. of Dr. Caldwell
Get a bottle s
Syrup Pepsin from your drugstore won’t
and nave ifready. Then you
have to worry when any member of
your family is headachy, bilious,
gassy or constipated. Syrup Pepsin the
'bowel*; JS.gootJ fpr 'increases .qll ages, appetite^—makes l.l sweetens
digestion more complete.
Dr. W. B. Caldwell's
SYRUP PEPSIN
A Doctor's Family Laxative
Pear Pot
One of the world’s strangest wars
—plan and his enemy the Insect
against a -vegetable plague—is being
wpged successfully in Australia,
where scientists have millions of cac
toblftsWs cajecpUJars eating , and an¬
nihilating a prolific cactus plant,
known as the “Prickly Pear"’ which
has in the past 30 years made an
■ Impassable jungle of 50,000,000 aeres
of fertile land, more than half again
the size of England.—Collier’s
Weekly.
Kill Rats
Without Poison
4 Wew exterminator that
■ Won't Kill Livestock, Poultry,
tfoga, Cats, or even Baby Chicks
K R Ocan be used about the home,barn or poul
try y^d with absolute safety as it contains no
dead)) IMson- K-R-Ois madeofSquHl, as recom
mended by US. Dept of Agriculture, oven-dried
under the Connabje process which insures max¬
imum strength. Used by County Agents in most
rat killing campaigns. Money-Back Guarantee,
Insist upon K'R-O.thcoriginal Squllle xtermin
•tor.All druggists.75c,$b25,$2>00. Direct if dealer
cannot supply you. K-R-O Co.,Springfield, Ohio
klLLS-RATS-ONLY
_
1
CHILDREN WITH WORMS
NEED HELP QUICKLY
Don’t delay a minute if your
child has worms. They will
destroy his health. If he grits
his teeth, picks his nostrils—
beware! These are worm
symptoms. Disordered, stom¬
ach is another.
Immediitely give him Frey’e Ver
mifuge. It has been the safe, vege¬
table worm medicine i or 75 years.
Don't wait! Buy Frey't Vermifugo
at your druggist's today.
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
I
Not So Dull
City Youth— And do yon mean to
cay you’ve never been to New York
to s>ce the sights?
Hustle—Xo; down .here we just
Wait for the sights to eotue and see
us.
An Eaty Way
- “Dorothy is gening a man's
wages.” “Yes, I hoard she was mar¬
ried."—Photographic Review.
HOW CARDUI
HELPS WOMEN
f#| “j * A was critical critical passing: time through in my a
'■£ life, and I suffered a great
deal,” says Mrs. Nat How¬
ard. of Quljan. Texas.. *'I
improved very much after I
had taken Cardui for a while.
Since then. I have given Car¬
dui to my. five daughters. As
each one of them arrived at
womanhood, I pave her Car¬
dui for several months. I
found they were less nervous
•and Jelt stronger. AH of them
Jiave continued the use of
Cardui iti theft homes! In my
home we have all been better
for having taken it** fs-j
CARDUI
SOLD AT DRUG STORES,
GEORGIA
N E_W S
//appenings Over
the State.
Boys’ Work Day was celebrated on
Thursday at the Thomasvtlte Rotary
club.
Hail fell in Savananh last Thursday
afternoon during a heavy rain which
lasted for ten minutes. Hail stones
were not of large size.
The formal opening of the last link
in the Chattanooga-Augusta highway
by the way of Gainesville, was cele¬
brated in Gainesville last week.
' Governor-elect Richard B. Russell,
Jr., spoke in Thomasville Tuesday at
the celebration by 4,000 school chil¬
dren of Thomas county public health
day.
Randall Boyd Ramsey, of near Dixie.
Ga., who claims to be a licensed phy¬
sician, was found guilty by a 'edor.il
court jury in Macon on a charge of
v'olating the Harrison narcotic act.
Mayor James D. Key and his daugh¬
ter, Miss Ruth Key, will leave Atlanta
May 11 for a six-weeks trip to Paris
as guests of the French government
at the.International Overseas Posses¬
sion Exposition.
Thomas C. Law, Atlanta, was elect¬
ed right'eminent grand commander of
the Knights Templar of Georgia at a
grand coinmandery session in Way
cross. Augusta was selected for the
1932 convention city.
The strawberry crop in Chattooga
county is now ripening, the first ship¬
ments going by express last week.
There is an unusually fine crop of
berries this spring, it is reported, but
there has been some damage by in¬
sects.
The third homing pigeon race spon¬
sored by the Atlanta Homing Pigeon
club was staged recently between At¬
lanta and Gainesville, Fla., a distance
of 314 air line miles. A bird owned by
W. J. Stoddard arrived first in 9 hours
12 minutes 58 seconds.
Tiie Griffin growers’ market, spon¬
sored by the Griffin Chamber of Com¬
merce, opened last Saturday morning
at 9 o'clock. An empty store building
nas been rented for the market. Twen¬
ty-two farmers of Spalding and Lamar
counties have signed up for regular
booths.
Police and detective chiefs of Au¬
gusta were under orders of the civil
service commission to "clean up” the
town and “be prepared to make a sat¬
isfactory report not later than July 2”
or hand in their resignations. This or¬
der followed an investigation by the
commission.
Attorneys for the Georgia public
service commission will appear in Ful¬
ton superior court, May 20, to argue
the validity of the motor carrier reg¬
ulatory bills, enacted at the special
session of the general assembly, which
have been attacked as unconstitutional
by the Taylor Transfer company.
Modified plans of the South Caro¬
lina state highway department and
Georgia state highway board for a
bridge atross the Savannah river near
Augusta. Ga., to provide a river cross¬
ing at higher river stages than pre¬
viously contemplated were approved
by war department in Washington.
A campaign by state officers against
illegal use of automobile license tags
resulted in G. L. McClure being bound
over by Recorder A. W. Callaway to
criminal court of Atlanta under $300
bond. Officers of DeKalb county said
that McClure was arrested in a car
bearing tags issued for another car.
Macon prepared for a reception of
thousands of visitors to the opening
of the cotton festival of middle Geor¬
gia and for their entertainment dur¬
ing the entire program of iwo days,
Friday and Saturday, last week, and
a stvie show and cotton ball at the
Macon auditorium Saturday night was
the copcluding feature.
The active support and assistance of
5.000 traveling ‘men and business ex¬
ecutives of the state of Georgia was
pledged 1 1) the aid of the Confederate
memorial on Stone mountain, when
the Georgia division of the "Travelers’
■protective Association of America, by
a unanimous vote, offered its aid to
the thy of Atlanta and those in
charge of the memorial work.
An unjjaid balance of $3.740.14S.39
due the. public Schools of Georgia was
detailed in a report'of an audit of the
school department delivered by State
Auditor Tom Wisdom to Governor
Hardman recently. The tate paid
the schools, in 1930. $t».916,0S9.73. Of
this total paid the schools last year,
$2,411,190.27 came from the state gas¬
oline and kerosene tax fund. The re¬
mainder came ont of the general treas¬
ury.
A welcoming breakfast was given
by the Atlanta chamber of commerce
at 7:45 in the restaurant of their
building, having as guests thirty busi¬
ness men who are recent arrivals in
Atlanta.
Hope for an amicable agreement be¬
tween owners of Stone Mountain and
the city of Atlanta that the Confed¬
erate memorial can be completed was
expressed by the Fulton county com¬
mission in adopting a resolution intro¬
duced by Commissioner Walter B.
Stewart.
CLEVELAND COURIER.
Gate of the Lion, Seville, Spain.
(Prepared by the National Geographic
Society, Washington, D. C.)
EPL’BLICAN Spain, latest
among ancient monarchies to
JLv. cast oft royal traditions, can
best be visualized through its
leading cities. For ft was the Spanish
urban dweller, not the peasant of the
countryside, who kept alive the long
fight for political reform.
First in Importance comes Madrid,
the capital. It is strikingly modern
In many aspects. It quite upsets the
geography student’s mental picture of
a typical Spanish city; for Madrid’s
city planners long ago gouged broad,
straight streets where narrow, tortu¬
ous byways once ran and low red
roofed houses whose eaves nearly met
overhead, have given way to modern
structures.
Now and then an ox-cart from the
rural district rumbles toward the
market place; dark-eyed senoritas In
mantillas and brilliant colored shawls
venture in the streets beside caped
swains with gay vests and trousers;
and bullfights still are popular pas¬
times: but Madrid for the most part
Is a bit of Paris, London and New
York set down on a Spanish plain
within eyeshot of medieval castles and
within a hundred miles of Toledo and
other more typically . Spanish cities
and towns.
Subway trains roar over a network
of tracks beneath Madrid’s streets,
cruising taxicabs are at the visitor's
beck and call, huge motor busses may
be hailed to take him to a neighboring
city over paved roads, and modern
cars of more- than fifty tram lines,
with mail boxes attached, course the
city streets.
Cables that carry the human voice
and the tick of the telegraph key to
all the capitals of Europe have re¬
cently been placed underground. An
underground sewage system, and an
underground water supply system car¬
rying sufficient water to enable street
cleaners to wash down the streets
several times a day, assure public
health.
Shop windows like those of Fifth
avenue display the latest fashions from
London and Paris, radios and electri¬
cal equipment from American factor¬
ies. Bobbed-hair shoppers trip from
Detroit-made automobiles.
The National Sport.
When the bullfight is on. a large
part of Madrid's sporting population
still flows toward the ring or toward
the newspaper bulletin boards for min¬
ute by minute reports, just as Amer¬
icans gather about our newspaper of¬
fices watching play by play a world's
series game recorded on as electrical
baseball diamond. However, the
“movie” with the names of Holly¬
wood's celebrities emblazoned in elec¬
tric lights and on gaudy posters also
enjoys the popularity of amusement
seekers.
Numerous parks and playgrounds
have been laid out. new subdivisions
have risen above the surrounding
plains, and the city fathers are busy
tearing down the old and building
the new. But with all the changes,
the Puerto del Sol. the so-called huh
of the city, remains the “venter of
everything” that it was a century ago.
Mingling with the city folk are
stocky Basques from the Pyrenean
country, ruddy-skinned gypsies, olive- |
complexioned individuals from the j
South, a sprinkling of Frenchmen. j
Englishmen. Italians, and a few repre¬ 1
sentatives from nearly all other Eu¬ I
ropean countries and America. ;
One of the spokes of the hub leads
to the $15,000,000 royal palace The I
palace yard has long been a public
park and playground where throngs of
men and women strolled on royal
walks, and children played games.
Madrid’s oldest pages of history are
newer than those of its Spanish neigh¬
bors. Philip II chose it as the Spanish
capital in 1560 when he sought to sat¬
isfy the various races of Spain. Sargos
sa was Aragonese. Burgos was Castil¬
ian, Toledo was Y.isigothlc, and Cor¬
dova and Seville were Moorish. From
a city of about 30,000 inhabitants, it
has steadily grown until it now is
almost as large as Cleveland, Ohio.
Madrid is the geographic center of
Spain, and in the same manner that
all the main avenues of Washington
radiate from the Capitol building, so in
Spain do all the principal railways
radiate from Madrid to the chief cities
on the coast. It is always a night's
ride In the sleeper or a hot day's
journey on the rapido.
Trains from almost every important
city to another point on the opposite
side of the country generally arrive
in Madrid a few minutes too late to
make the connection.
Focus of Spanish Eyes.
Of course, the capital is the focus
of all Spanish eyes and but very
few provincials could go through Ma¬
drid and resist the temptation to stop
for at least a few hours; so perhaps
little harm is done by the lack of
through trains.
Next to be considered in Barcelona,
so individualistic that it long has
threatened to become the capital of an
independent Catalan state. Barcelona's
life may be said to be dominated by
the Kanibla, the city's chief avenue.
For several blocks along the Kambla
the curbstone is lined with open air
shops. Flower shops emit the scent of
violets, roses, carnations and lilies,
until the stroller passes a doughnut,
fish or toasted sandwich booth. There
are booths of professional letter
writers, magazine stands with a com¬
plete line of periodicals and lottery
tickets, stands where women can buy
silk stockings and other wearing ap¬
parel, and stands of bird sellers whose
warbling merchandise is concealed In
tiers, of cages.
In the street humanity is so thick
that it is difficult for traffic to pass.
The Itatnbla is not only a shopping
district, but a meeting place, a loafing
place, and an employment “office.”
The Spanish sailor with his red sash
and red and white handkerchief tied
about bis neck, and the uniforms of
merchantmen from perhaps a dozen
different countries add color to the
throng. The bill poster, looking for a
job, is singled out by the long pole,
with brush attached, which he car¬
ries on his shoulders, and no one could
mistake the public porters whose caps
look like turnover rolls with the folded
side over the forehead.
Harks Back to Middle Ages.
Barcelona is modern in appearance,
although the port dates to the second
century and ranked with Genoa and
Venice in Mediterranean trade in the
Middle Ages.
The spacious harbor into which the
Phoenicians sailed in quest of new
peoples with whom to trade, and which
Columbus triumphantly entered after
his return from America, now is
pierced by long, modern wharves, each
accommodating several large ocean-go¬
ing vessels at a time.
Tfie old quay, now well paved. Is
lined on its inner side with modern
buildings and a promenade flanked by
two rows of palm-trees occupies its
center.
The old part of the city, once sur¬
rounded by a wall, still has some of
its canyonlike streets, many so nar¬
row that the wheels of carts nearly
scrape both curbs as they pass, and
balconied windows of bordering build¬
ings nearly meet.
But many of these crooked lanes
open into wide streets. For instance
the aforementioned Rambla which
bisects the city from the harbor north
ward is a tree-lined boulevard and the
site of the old wail now is a park
called the Rondas. One can walk in
this parkway from one end of the
quay, through the center of Barcelona
and back .to the other end of the
quay, among flowering gardens and
under shade trees. The Ronda fre¬
quently opens into public squares, one
of which is the Plaza de Cataiuna,
the hub of Barcelona.
Here trams, automobiles, busses and
wagons, running into the square from
a dozen directions are bewildering to
the pedestrians who crowd npon nu¬
merous safety zones, but the apparent
traffic tangle seems not to alarm the
well-trained Barcelona traffic officers.
Barcelona has a magnificent Gothic
cathedral, a university, many historic
churches, museums, and new buildings
of the pure “Barcelona school" of
architecture, the lines of which simu¬
late ocean waves. But the outdoor
life of the inhabitant* U the lure of
the Spanish city.
Improved Uniform International
Sunday School
T Lesson T
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.. Mem¬
ber of Faculty. Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago.)
((c) . 1931, Western Newspaper Union )
Lesson for May 24
JESUS PREPARING FOR THE END
GOLDEN TEXT—And he took bread,
and gave thanks, and brake it, and
gave unto them, saying, This is my
body which is given for you: this do
in remembrance of me.
LESSON TEXT—Luke 22:7-30.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Jesus Wants Us
to Remember Him.
JUNIOR TOPIC—How We Can Re¬
member Jesus.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP¬
IC —Meaning of the Lord s Supper.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP¬
IC —Meaning of the Lord's Supper.
I. The Last Passover (vv. 7-18).
1. The Passover prepared (vv. 7-13).
a. Peter and John sent to prepare
the Passover (v. 8). As the time had
arrived for the killing of the Passover,
Jesus commanded these disciples to
make ready for it.
b. The disciples’ Inquiry (v. 9).
They inquired of Jesus as to where
they should prepare the Passover. The
true disciple is not only ready to do
the Lord’s bidding, but anxious to
know exactly his will.
c. The Master's strange directions
(vv. 10-12). They were to go into the
city where they would meet a man
bearing a pitcher of water. The usual
custom was for the women to carry
the water. This unusual occurrence
would make it easier for them to find
the man. He assured them that they
would then be shown a large upper
room furnighed.
d. The obedience of the disciples
tv. 13). They did as Jesus directed
them. They did not stop to question
the sanity of the command but, as
true disciples, obeyed.
2. The Passover eaten (vv. 14-18).
a. By whom (v. 14). Those who
sat down to this last Passover Feast
were the Master and the twelve
apostles.
b. Jesus’ words unto the disciples
(vv. 15-18).
(1) “I have desired to eat this Pass
over with you before I suffer" (v. 15).
He greatly desired to show them the
meaning of the passion through which
he was to go.
(2) “I will not any more eat there¬
of until it be fulfilled in the kingdom
of God" (r. 1C). His death was the
antitypical fulfillment of tiie Passover.
(3) “Take this cup and divide it
among yourselves" (vv. 17. 18). By
the token of the cup the disciples were
partaking of his shed blood. Drink¬
ing anew in the kingdom of God does
not mean that in heaven this service
will be renewed, but that it was sym¬
bolic of the heavenly realiiy.
II. The Feast of the New Covenant
instituted (vv. 19. 20).
This feast took place at the close of
tiie paschal supper.
1. The bread a symbol of Christ's
body (v. 19). As bread nourishes and
strengthens our bodies, so Christ is
food to our spiritual nature. Unless
our souls feed upon Christ, we shall
perish.
2. The cup a symbol of Christ’s
blood <v. 20). This was symbolic of
the atonement wiiich was made by the
shedding of his blood on Calvary's
cross. He said, “This cup is the new
testament in my blood which was shed
for you.” indicating that each one
must personally accept tiie atonement
made by the shedding of his blood.
III. The Wicked Behavior at the
Feast (vv. 21-27).
1. The treachery of Judas (vv.
21-23).
a. The time of its manifestation (v.
21), It was while they were eating
the last Passover that Jesus made the
announcement of the betrayal, per
haps that Judas might he given an op¬
portunity at this last moment to re¬
pent.
b. The betrayal was by the deter
ruinate counsel of God (v. 22 Cf. Acts
2:23). Nothing takes place by chance.
Even the sinful acts of wicked men
come within the permissive province
of God. This does not. however, les
sen the guilt of sinners, for Jesus said,
“Woe unto the man by whom he is
betrayed.”
c. The sorrowful question (v. 23).
The disciples did not seem to suspect
one another but made the question a
personal one.
2. The selfish ambition of the dis
ciples (vv. 24-27). In this tragic hour
the disciples were so concerned with
the thought of position that they
were striving among themselves as to
who should be the greatest.
IV. The Apostles’ Place in the King¬
dom (vv. 28-30).
Jesus assured them that those who
continued with him in his trials would
be appointed a place in the Kingdom
which would entitle them to eat and
drink at his table and sit on thrones
judging the twelve tribes of Israel.
In the Redeemer’s Debt
For us, who are deep in the Redeem¬
er’s debt, who have had much forgiv¬
en. who every day are bankrupt debt¬
ors to the measureless mercy of infi¬
nite love—for us no paltriness will
suffice.—C. H. Spurgeon.
Great Thing* From God
We should expect great things from
God. He is a great God; he is in the
habit of doing great things. Let us
expect the great things and we shall
have them.—Jo! n R. Mott.
that
slu ggi sh
feeling
Put yourself right with nature by
chewing Feen - a - mint. Works mildly
but effectively in small doses. Modern
— safe — scientific. For the family.
Feenamint
unn g
ask for
rH£ ORIGINAL
Feenamint tinf
'The Chewing Gum lum J
LAXATIVE /E A
No Taste But the Mint **
Chew It Am
Like Gum mm
FOR CONSTIPATION
New Indigestion Remedy
Iced oxygen for indigestion and
other stomach troubles is the latest
wrinkle in British medical circles
and is said to be producing surpris¬
ingly satisfactory results. It is pleas¬
ant to swallow in the form of an
oxygen souffle with a few* drops of
lemon or peach juice sprinkled over
it and serves the purpose of getting
oxygen into the stomach without
trouble. This novelty was demon¬
strated at the London medical exhi¬
bition and was sampled by inquisi¬
tive visitors.
ill NERVOUS?
Columbus, Ga.
—“During my
first expectant
period I was
weak, nervous and
rundown, my kid¬
neys began giving
me a lot of
trouble, I suffered
with my back all
the time — was
able to be on my
feet only a part of the time. Finally
I decided to try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription and I soon began to get
strong and was able to attend to my
household duties the remainder of the
time. I think the ‘Prescription’ is the
greatest help in motherhood of any
medicine a woman can take.”—Mrs.
W. E. Kinsman. 2719 First Ave.
All druggists. Fluid or tablets.
Send lOe to Dr. Pierre's Clinic in Buffalo,
N.Y., if you desire an acquaintance package.
Healthy Town
New Hampton, X. H„ is a health¬
ful town to live In. According to the
town report just published, the
youngest person who died in 1930
was seventy-one years of age, the
oldest was eighty-five years and the
average age of the nine deaths re¬
ported was seventy-seven years.
CHECKS COLDS
OVERNIGHT
Because It’s Double
Strength
You don’t have to suffer days
and maybe weeks before your cold
is finally stopped. Just take St,
Joseph’s Lax-ana (double results. strength)
and get overnight This
tested prescription is famous ev¬
erywhere "breaks for the quick, sure way
it up stuffy head colds and
deep-seated colds which make you
feel dizzy, weak and “achy.” St.Jo
seph’s Lax-ana (double strength)
combines best cold medicines
known to science together with
quick-acting laxatives. Your drug¬
gist sells St.Joseph’s’ Lax-ana‘on
a money-back guarantee.
IAX
If; :H I W W " jJLrtT ti r i < "Hr r «
Jt is easier to be wrong than it
is to be President.
In jealousy there is more self-love.
-La Rochefoucauld.
i EXT time you are out of fix as
the result of irregular or faulty bowel
movement, try tiie Thedford’s Black
Draught for refreshing relief it
gives thousands who take it Mr. E.
W. Cecil, a construction superinten¬
dent in Pulaski, Va., says: “When
I get constipated, my head aches, and
I have that dull, tired feeling—just
not equal to my work. I don’t feel
hungry and I know that I need some¬
thing to cleanse my system, so I take
Black-Draught. have Can sure say we
found it a great help.** f*a-j
THEDFORD’S BUCK-DRAUGHT
Deed over 100 years for sores,
boils, stings, corns, small cuts
or burns, frostbite. Get
Gray’s Ointment
From druggist or W. F. Gray
« A Co., Nashville, Term. One
I 25c box usually does the work. Endorsed by Presi¬
dent Andrew Jackson. Write for free almanac.
DAISY FLY KILLER
Ptaeed cmSTrt*re. DAISY FLY KILLER ^tnurta and
kflis all flies. Nest. dean, ornamental, convenient and
j ffffcMA, J fr cheap. Lasts all sea
eon. Made of metal;
f ean't spiii or tip over;
will not Boil or injure
r anything. Guaranteed.
,n » , * t “P« n OAISyFlY
HAROLD ____ KILLER from your dealer.
^ . SOMERS, BROOKLYN.
N. Y.