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LITTLE NEWS ITEMS
THROUGHOUT STATE
Atlanta. —Jim Williams of the
Greensboro Herald-Journal headed a
delegation of Greene county citizens
who came here this week for the pur
pose of receiving state aid in the fight
their county is making on the cattle
tick. The farmers of Greene county
are very much interested iu raising
and working along lines that will do
that county a great deal of good.
Savannah.—Using two wagons to
haul their loot away burglars broke
into the place of Ameen Thomas No.
.410 West Broughton street, and se
cured goods valued at more than SSOO.
The burglary was committed some
time between 10:30 o'clock at night
and 6 o'clock in the morning.
Palmetto.--A good many articles,
such as brass candlesticks, vases, jar
dinieres, and clothing, have been re
covered by Chief of Police Jenkins
since the arrest .of the new “Jack the
Ripper." He was selling art squares,
rugs, clothing and various other arti
cles to the colored population of this
city.
Lyerly.—Chattooga county is to put
up a strong fight against the cattle
ticks the coming summer and the erad
ication of the cattle tick in this coun
ty is being rapidly pushed. Joseph F.
Kimbell, recently elected major of Ly
erly, has been appointed cattle inspec
tor for the county, and D. B. Scott
and Frank Thompson assistant in
spectors. These inspectors are to work
under the direction of Inspector S. V.
Ewers of Walker county.
Thomson.—McDuffie county is forg
ing ahead in the cattle raising indus
try, as is evidenced by the sale last
week of S6BO worth of home-raised
steers by J. H. Kendrick of North
McDuffie. They were bought by J.
F. Watson and shipped to other mar
kets. There were thirty head in all,
being in excellent condition. It is
said that Mr. Kendrick has over fifty
calves on his farm that will be ready
for market next year.
Douglas.—Charged with shooting and
killing Lawrence Newborn, town mar
shal of Broxton, Ga., the authorities
sought the arrest of Charles Graham.
1. T. Graham, a brother of the fugi
tive, also was slightly wounded by the
latter. The shooting occurred in
Broxton when Graham was arrested
by the marshal charged with making a
disturbance. While being taken to the
town jail he is alleged to have drawn
a revolver, shot Newbern and at
tempted to shoot a constable aiding
the marshal, the bullet going astray
and slightly wounding I. T. Graham.
Roswell.—Mrs. Douglas Robinson,
sister of Theodore Roosevelt, former
president of the United States, for the
first time, visited her ancestral home
at Roswell, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. Robin
son made the trip with Forerst Adair,
and spent a while at the old Bulloch
mansion. They were crdially received
and passed several pleasant hours.
Mr. and Mrs. Robinson arrived in At
lanta and registered at the Georgian
Terrace. They left for Savannah,
which was the winter home of the Bul
lochs, while the summer residence was
at Roswell.
Crawfordville.—At a meeting of the
executive committee of Taliaferro
county, it has been decided to hold
the county primaary, May 26, all en
tries to be in by May 16. Up to this
time, there have been no announce
ments for the county offices, though
it is understood that all the county
officers wish to continue in office.
This being Taliaferro’s time to name
tha senator from this district, Hon.
W. R. Reid has announced for-that
office. There has been no formal an
nouncement of any one to oppose him.
Dublin.—A bold attempt of two pris
oners to saw out of jail was stopepd
by Sheriff Flanders in the county jail
here when he discovered one of the
men sawing a bar to one of the win
dows late at night. The prisoner was
a white man named Eubanks, and had
the liberty of the corridor of the jail
where he could reach a window. A
negro prisonar under sentence of i
death. Shed Hill, stated that he had
given a white man named Welch, who ;
had just been released from the jail
on bond, $lO to get him some saws.
Welch smuggled three hack saws into
Hill, but as the negro was locked in ‘
a cell, he could not reach the window
and made a trade with Eubanks, who
was in the corridor, to saw the bars
at the window and then saw the bolt
to the lock of the cell.
Savannah—A floral auto parade, the I
first ever held in South Georgia, and
in all likelihood the first ever held
in Georgia, will be one of the features
of the festivities accompanying the
meeting of the National Drainage Con
gress at Savannah, April 22 to 25.
Liberal prizes will be offered for the
most attractively decorated automo
bile or float. Many entries have al
ready been made from Savannah auto
mobilists and from the inquiries re
ceived it is apparent that many other
Georgia towns will have representa
tives competing for the honors of the
occasion.
A FREE BOOK
That Teaches the People How to
Avoid Catching Cold.
The thirteenth edition of the “Ills of
Life" is now ready for distribution. Be
ginning on page three of this popular work
on medicine, is an article stating in plain
language how anj- one can avoid catching
cold.
The article was written by a doctor. It
I was written by a doctor eighty-four years
I old, who is a hale and hearty man. It is
' his boast, founded upon fact, that he does
not catch cold. He thinks he knows the
! reason why. He explains it in detail in
this book. Every family ought to have a
copy of it. Sent free by the Peruna Co.,
■ Columbus. Ohio.
Mr. O. Fred Linstrum, 1923 University
> Ave., St. Paul, Minn., writes: “I con
tracted a severe cold several years ago.
Through the use of Peruna I fully recov
ered. 1 have never had anj- trouble since.”
Mrs. Henry Martin, La Motte, lowa,
says: “I have found Peruna to be a great
I remedy- for coughs and colds of children.
; A dose at bedtime will relieve them all
I night."—Adv.
The Two Kinds.
Dr. Talcott Willems, the brilliant
' head of the Columbia School of Jour
■ nalism, said at a recent luncheon:
"The sensational type of newspaper
l is happily going out. The exponents
of this type used to defend themselves
with the assertion that their scandal-
I ous articles were a natural response
: to a natural curiosity.
"Hut to this a great editor once re
“ ‘There are two kinds of curiosity.
Into one kind we stick our brain: into
the other only bur nose.' "
wmoo
LIVEft BOWELS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh
■ with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
! Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
: Purgative Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
; Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg
! ulate the stomach, remove the sour
i and fermenting food and foul gases,
; take the excess bile from the liver
; and carry out of the system all the
I constipated waste matter and poisons
| in the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will make you
| feel great by morning. They work
, while you sleep—never gripe, eicken
I or cause any inconvenience, and cost
i only 10 cents a box from your store,
i Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
; have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
' Constipation. Adv.
Fireplaces.
"Fireplaces," says a woman archi
: tect, “should be placed on the in
i side walls and grouped together, for
; this arrangement keeps the heat in
the, house and provides that, when
' one fire is lighted and the flues get
; warmed the other fires all light and
■ draw better.”
ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED
Falmouth, Ky.—"Two years ago I
j was troubled with skin and scalp
troubles. I would have pimples that
; would break out and form sores on
my face and head, with terrible itch
i ing. The eczema on my face and
; head itched and burned and when I
I scratched it, it made sores and I
was very disfigured for the time be
ing. My head became so Bore Iwuid
• not touch it with a comb; it became
a mass of sores. My hair fell out
gradually;
"I was afflicted about a year before
I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment
: and after using them three weeks I
I was getting better and in less than
I three months, after using eight cakes
' of Cuticura Soap and five boxes of
Cuticura Ointment, I was completely
cured of eczema.” (Signed) Frank
Vastine, Dec. 12, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
The fool-killer doesn't exist. If he
did there would be no tomorrow's
wall flowers.
Sore Eyes, Granulated Eyelids and Sties
promptly healed Boman Eye Bal-
sam. Adv.
When a woman rides horseback man
fashion she ought to know enough not
to get off a street car backwards.
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO. GEORGIA.
TOOK MATTERS TOO HASTILY
What a Difference, If Miss Stubbles
Could Have Waited but a Few
Short Minutes.
"Then I am to understand that this
is your final answer, Miss Stubbles?"
“My final answer."
“Nothing can move you?"
“Nothing."
"Then my life will be a lonelj- one
and my fate a harsh one, for my uncle
with whom I lived has just died and
left me—”
"That fact somewhat alters the case,
Henry. I cannot be harsh to one who
has sustained such recent bereave
ment If I could believe that you are
sincere—”
“Sincere! Ob, Miss Stubbles!"
“You have certainly made an im
pression on my heart. Give me time
to think of it.”
“How long?”
"After'all, why think of it, Henry?
I am yours.”
“Oh, Genevieve!"
"Do not squeeze me so hard. Henry.
Your poor uncle! Was he long ill?”
"Three days.”
“It is too bad. You say he left you?”
“Yes; he has left me.”
"How much?"
“How much? I said he bad left me.
He had nothing else to leave. I am
alone In the world now; homeless,
penniless, but with you by my side—
why, she’s fainted!”
On Thin Goods.
If you have trouble in making but
tonholes in thin material, here is a
way of overcoming the difficulty:
Hold a piece of the material on the
under side and cut the hole through
this as though it were part of the
waist. When the buttonhole is fin
ished, cut away the under cloth very
carefully so that It will not show.
There will be no difficulty, even with
chiffon, if the cloth is folded two or
three times.
IF BACK HURTS CLEAN
KIDNEYS WITH SALTS
Drink Lots of Water and Stop Eating
Meat for a While If the Bladder
Bothers You.
Meat forms uric acid which excites
and overworks the kidneys In their
efforts to filter It from the system.
Regular eaters of meat must flush the
kidneys occasionally. You must re
lieve them like you relieve your bow
els; removing all the acids, waste and
poison, else you feel a dull misery in
the kidney region, sharp pains in the
back or sick headache, dizziness, your
stomach sours, tongue is coated and
when the weather is bad you have
rheumatic twinges. The urine is
cloudy, full of sediment; the channels
often get irritated, obliging you to get
up two or three times during the
night.
To neutralize these Irritating acids
and flush off the body's urinous waste
get about four ounces of Jad Salts
from any pharmacy; take a table
spoonful in a glass of water before
breakfast for a few days and your kid
neys will then act fine and bladder
disorders disappear. This famous salts
is made from the acid of grapes and
lemon juice, combined with lithla, and
has been used for generations to clean
and stimulate sluggish kidneys and
stop bladder Irritation. Jad Salts is
Inexpensive; harmless and makes a
delightful effervescent lithia-water
drink which millions of men and
women take now and then, thus avoid
ing serious kidney and bladder dis
eases.—Adv.
No Shook.
Church—l see It is said there are
more than three thousand five hun
dred books on electrical subjects in
the library of congress at Washing
ton.
Gotham —And yet I do not suppose
that Anthony Comstock would be
shocked by even one of them.
Distress After Eating.
Indigestion and Intestinal Fermen
tation immediately relieved by taking
a Booth-Overton Dyspepsia Tablet. I
Buy a 50c. bottle at Druggists. Money
refunded if they do not help, or write
for free sample. Booth-Overton Co.,
11 Broadway, New York, —Adv.
Just Hungry.
“I've tried all kinds of health foods,
but none of them seem to fit my case."
"What Is it you are troubled with?"
“An appetite.”—Minneapolis Jour
nal.
IF YOU’RE GROUCHY
It is likely that your liver needs stir
ring up. Wright's Indian Vegetable
Pills will set you right quickly. Adv.
If people were as good as their obit
uaries the recording angel would soon
be looking for another job.
Those of Middle Age Especially.
When you have found no remedy for the horrors that
oppress you during change of life, when through the long
hours of the day it seems as though your jack would break,
when your head aches constantly, you are nervous, de
pressed and suffer from those dreadful bearing down pains,
don’t forget that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
is the safest and surest remedy, and has carried hundreds
of women safely through this critical period.
Read what these three women say:
From Mrs. Hornung, Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y. —“I am writing to let you know how much vour
medicine has done for mo. I failed terribly during the last winter
and summer and every one remarked about my appearance. I suf
fered from a female trouble and always had pains in my back, no
appetite and at times was very weak.
*T was visiting at a friend’s house one day and she thought I needed
Lydia E. J’inkham’s Veget able Compound. I took it and have gained
eight pounds, have a good appetite and am feeling lietter every day.
Everybody is asking me what I am doing and I recommend Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. You may publish this let ter if you
wish and I hope others who have the same complaint will see it and
get health from your medicine as I did.”—Mrs. A. Hornung, 91
Stanton St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Was A Blessing To This Woman.
So. Richmond, Va.—“ I was troubled with a bearing down pain and
a female weakness and could not stand long on my feet. Os all tho
medicines I took nothing helped me like Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound. lam now regular and am getting along tine. I
cannot praise the Compound too much. It has been a blessing to me
and I hope it will be to other women.” —Mrs. D. Tyler, 23 West
Clopton St., South Richmond, Va.
Pains in Side, Could Hardly Stand.
Lodi, Wis.—“ I was in a bad condition, suffering from a femalo
trouble, and I bad such pains in my sides 1 could hardly move. Be
fore I had taken the whole of one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound I felt better, and now I am well and can do a good
day’s work. I tell everybody what your medicine has done for me.”
—Mrs. John Thompson, Lodi, Wisconsin.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has been the standard reniMy for fe
male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments
does justice to herself if she does not try this fa
mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it
has restored so many suffering women tohealth.
PWBg*. Write to LYDIA E.I'INKIIAM MEDICINE CO.
• (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice.
Your letter will be opened, read and answered
by a woman and held in strict confidence.
A little flattery now and then will
soften up the toughest men.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take.
Do not gripe. Adv.
Nothing jolts a mean man like a
dose of his own medicine.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain
the hands. Adv.
Many a good sailor has been
wrecked on the sea of matrimony.
Whenever You Need a Genera! Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard
Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic
Is Equally Valuable as a General Strengthening Tonic, Because It Acts on the
Liver, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds Up the Whole System.
You know what you are taking when you take Grove'a Tasteless chill Tonic, as
the formula is printed on. every label, showing that it contains the well-known
tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and
Fever, Weakness, General Debility and Loss of Appetite. Gives life and vigor to
Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. A True Tonio and Sure Appetizer.
For grown people and children. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 500.
Get MUSTEROLE Today
for Lumbago!
It’s an amazingly quick relief. And
it’s so easy to use.
You just rub MUSTEROLE in
briskly, and presto, the
pain is feone —a deli
cious, soothing comfort
comes to take its place.
MUSTEROLE is a
clean, white ointment,
made with oil of mus
tard. Use it instead of
mustard plaster. Will not blister.
Doctors and nurses use MUSTER
OLE and recommend it to their
patients.
DDIWOV I HEATED, usually glvesqniek
J BuUEu I relief,soon removes swelling
07 * abort breath,often gives entire relief
1n15t025 days. Trial treatmen t sent Free
J’ a! Dr THOMAS E. GREEN, Successor to
* Dr. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
PARKER’S ~~
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Rertoring Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
600, and |I.OO at Druggists.
KHOOE ISLAND REDS and CAM PIN EM
the greatest layers Hugs 11.00 per hoUtnu up. Frea
booklet. Uld Va. Poultry Farm, Lawrenceville, Va»
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 13-1914.
They will gladly tell you what relief
it gives from Sore Throat, Bronchitis,
Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia,
Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism,
Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the
Back or Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles,
Bruises, Chilblains, Frosted Feet,
Colds of the Chest (it prevents
Pneumonia). At r druggist’s.
nr- 1 rn- j
land, Ohio, and we will mail you a jar,
postage prepaid. (57>
Dr. J. J. Gordon, a well-known Detroit Physl
clan says, "Musterole is invaluable in my prac
tice and my home.”
in 25c and 50c jars, ana
a special large hospital
size for $2.50.
Accept no substitute.'
If your druggist cannot
supply you, send 25c or
50c to the MUSTER
OLE Company, Cleve-