Newspaper Page Text
r ^ u^ -jus ;
I Try these
Bakers’ Raisin Pies
—save baking at home
^T'HERE are luscious rat's- Raisins furnish 1560 calories
I in pies just around the °T energizing nutriment per
corner, at your grocer’s or a P ound ln P™«i«"y predigested ,
bake shop. or "?’ ,
.. , , - , Also a fine content of food-
Baked to a turn—a flaky iron—good food for the blood.
crust filled with tender, Use raisins frequently, there
tempting raisins, the rich fore, which are both good and
juice forming a delicious good /or y ou > in puddings cakes,
sauce. cookies, eta
» ou may be offered other
Orue try these pies that brands |hat
you know less well >
master bakers bake fresh daily than Sun-Maids, but the kind
in your city and you’ll never you want is the kind you know
take the trouble afterwards * s good; Insist, therefore, on I
. Sun-Mata brand. They cost no
Ito make raisin pies at home. more thaQ ordinary r J ginfc
I Get a pie now and let your Mail n for fw boofc
men folks taste It. of tested Sun-Maid recipes.
Made with tender,thin-skinned, Learn what you can do with
meaty, seeded Sun-Maid Raisins. luscious raisins.
SUN-MAID RAISINS
The Supreme Pie Raisin
Your retailer thould sell you Sun-Maid Raising
for not more than the following prices:
Seeded (in 18 oz. blue pkga. >—2oc
t Seedless (im 15 oz. red pkge.)—lßc
Seeded or Seedless (11 ot.j—lsc
Seeded, in tine </20«.)—20c
Seeded, in tint (8 oz.)— lsc
i ■
CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT |
I
Sun-Maid Raisin Growers,
Freinu, California . 1
Please send me copy of your free book, I
“Recipes with Raisins.”
Namr.— *—7. ’
Street j 1
Blue Package City State I '
f r* i
Remarkable New Alloy.
4 young French chemist named
Mmarla has invented a new alloy re- !
•emtdmg gold and it lias been
tBTWNt “nieum.” It lias the hright
aess, durability and inoxicUzhbility of
PM which qualities will permit its ;
■nWiiuUim in Jewelry and other
DMUKsfacltires where gold Is now used.
K* particulars ns to composition seem
■ vn Ruble
Tins PS -
Rant r~- T* sa.
bhapea nr
m | orc us. mt or? J 1
Hark <
Look for thi. boot shaped trade mark
OS stamped on the back of the cloth. I jHBKMHBK
Work Clothes Means Long Wear
GET Your Overall.,ShirU.One-Piece Garment. Z^|u
and Women’s Dresses made out of this cloth. 4MH _
It«easily washed and wears like harness leather. ISlnߣ IwMUI l»
Gt>menf» Bold by dealers everywhere. We are uLWg! MM Iffl
MMdmveefthe clotHonly. rIrVF
XL-STIFEL & SONS, Indigo Dyers and Printers ||H^l I
Wheeling, W. Va. 11»i3hR lllTOli iMHmilz
f^ew Twrk 260 Church Street llmlw CBsSaiA,
SaliKnnro Mkt. Pl. & Pratt St.. 117 W. Balto. St. I WB*']
Otcaeo 223 W. Jackson Boulevard HIhRH IT
St Jcveph 201 Saxton Bank Building B l Illi I® Ln Wf
MIIWF 724 Merchants Net. Bank Building
Wmnipec 400 Hammond Budding Udlhnwila
St 604 Star Building ’M nH|||HUglln
SuFmaci^ o 508 Postal Telegraph Building
Stifel's Indigo Cloth vJIL
Cz Standard for over 7^ Years
"The white won't Mvaken
Every year you plant Irish Potatoes.
Every year you have Potato Bugs,
Every year you should use
STONECYPHER’S
Irish Potato Bug Killer e *®*®**«*^’*' ’
Guaranteed to destroy the bug without damage to the plant.
Also destroys all leaf eating insects on cabbage, cucumber,
cantaloupe, squash and tomato vines. Ap
ply lightly. Cost low. Applicaton easy.
Results sure.
For Sale by Drug. Seed
/o a "d ®^ neral Sfores
M STONECYPHER DRUG &
CHEMICAL CO.
U'\">T ■4Z Westminster, - - - S. 0.
A Real Test.
Coue fins had bis method done in
I moving pictures. Well*, If be cun get
the movies to get better and better
every day he will have accomplished
a real trick. Detroit Free Press.
George at His Worst.
Grace--“ George kissed me fervently
three times Ilie other night." Alice—
" That's nothing for George."—Judge.
BRYAN COUNTY ENTERPRISE. PEMBROKE. GEORGIA
COTTON EMBARGO
BY SHIMS UNES
MOVE IS FORCED BY CONGESTION
CAUSED BY RAILROAD
EMBARGO
STATE NEWS OF INTEREST
Brief News Items Gathered Here And
There From All Sections Os
The State
Savannah. —Due to congestion of
rail and coastwise water facilities an
embargo is now in effect over the
Ocean Steamship company on lumber
and cotton. The rail lines placed an
embargo on cotton recently which di
verted large quantities of the staple
through Savannah to eastern mills.
The Ocean Steamship company, it
is understood, received more of this
business than could be handled and
on March 17, H. M. Emerick, port
agent at Savannah, notified all gener
al freight agents at this port that he
had been wired by T. N. Cook, gen
eral freight agent of Ocean Steam- j
ship company, to discontinue the ac- |
ceptance of cotton and linters origi ;
nating at points -west of the Alabama- :
Mississippi state line or on or west '
of the Mississippi river.
At the present time this cotton is i
tied up, as neither rails noh coast- ;
wise lines are able to handle it. The
embargo on cotton was placed some
| time after the present embargo on
I lumber. On March 7, H. M. Emerick
notified all general freight agents that
his company had discontinued the ac
ceptance of all number moving on
through billing.
It is understood several lumber men j
have conferred with steamship offic-1
ials in an effort' to secure space for i
their lumber to eastern ports.
Indicts Alleged "Whisky Ring”
Dalton. — Thirty-eight indictments
were returned by the grand jury now i
in session here on the evidence of S.
A. Slaton, who was convicted on the
charge of possessing whisky and plead
ed guilty to manufacturing whisky,
this opportunity being given him by
Judge M. C. Tarver before complet
ing the record against Slaton. The
defendants. whom Slaton is i
marked J* are persons im
plicated by him J’Feither having assist
ed him in making whisky or who
bought from his in quantities ranging
from one quart to hundreds of gallons.
Those indicted included a number of.
prominent citizens residing here and
in Chattanooga.
, I
Officers Probe Mysterious Find
Savannah. —Working from one of the i
most grewsome bits of silent evidence *
and with absolutely no other clew I
than the mysterious find reported to ;
them, county police here are seeking
to discover if a most atrocious killing
may be solved. Where it occurred i
they do not know. Police were noti
fied that in a freight car which left ;
Milledgeville, March 30, and arrived •
here March 31. and was in the yards i
of the Savannah and Atlanta railroad i
had been found a mattress, covered i
with human blood, with parts of hu
man vital organs upon it, and the mat
tress was almost shot to pieces, evi j
dently by numerous loads of buckshot I
’ired at close range.
Snelling Cited On Contempt Charge
Athens. —Charles H. Snelling, dean j
of the University of Georgia, has been :
served with a writ by Judge Blanton |
Fortson of the superior court, direct- j
ing the dean to appear in court April ;
7 and show cause why he is not in I
contempt of court in the action taken ;
in expelling J. R. Roberts, a law stu-1
dent, on the recommendation of the |
student council of the university. The
hearing on an injunction obtained by
Roberts is scheduled for April 7. Rob
erts also appealed to Governor Hard- '
wick who in turn addressed a letter |
to the university authorities asking
’hem to reconsider the expulsion.
D'ligent Search Made For Rumph
Savannah. — Savannah friends of I
Rumph, formerly of Savannah, now of I
Jacksonville, a traveling salesman for j
a Baltimore Drug house left to make ’
diligent search over south Georgia for j
him. Mr. Rumph checked out of a j
Valdosta hotel recently and no clew ;
as to where he went or where he is .
now has been found. He had a wife :
and child in Jacksonville. His father !
inlaw. J. P. Rivers, of Savannah, aj
brother-in-law and other friends left i
'o search for him.
Enraged Steer Chases Sheriff
Waycross. —Driven up a tent pole 1
by a wild west show steer at the car
nival now showing at Hebardville, i
was the experience of Sheriff Sweat
and County Officers Heirs. The offic
ers were seated in the grandstand at
the show when the steer broke loose.
Rushing madly around the ring several
times the steer headed straight for the
local county officers.
CHANCE IN FARM CREDIT
SYSTEM DECLARED NEEDED
— I 11-
Betts Says That Georgia Is In Danger
Os Be'ng Owned By People
Out Os State
Atlanta. —As long as the present
farm credit system prevails in Geor
gia there is no hope for approximately
200,000 farmers jn the state, George
Betts, president of the Georgia associa
tion, declared in an address before the
April meeting of the Presidents’ club
on farm conditions.
I Mr. Betts, known throughout the
state for his ‘‘Turner county” doc
trine, outlined to the gathering the
‘‘dairy cow, hog and hen” program of
farming which he offers as a solu
| tion to the present predicament in
i which Georgia farmers find them
selves as they battle the boll weevil.
“Present farm conditions in Georgia
are nothing short of terrible,” he said.
“Unless there is a hight-about face in
Georgia’s agricultural progress it won’t
be long before Georgia farm lands will
1 | be owned by persons in distant states.
i And unless methods are improved it
may be best for them to take them
over and pay the interest on them.”
291 Distilleries In Georgia Raided
Atlanta.- With a record of 291 dis
1 tilleries captured during the month of
j March, together with $56,216.80 worth
■ of property seized and destroyed, as
■ shown by the monthly report, Fred
ID. Dismuke, prohibition director for
I Georgia, declared that the work of his
i men indicated that the Georgia squad
would again top the list for efficiency
over all other states in tho union
when the end of the fiscal year comes,
June 30. Following is the report, show
ing a comparison with the report for
the same period last year: Distiller
ies. 1922, 212; 1923, 291. Worms. 1922,
50; 1923, 70. Gallons of Whisky, 1922,
j 1.430; 1923, 1.819. Gallons of beer.
11922, 153,045; 1923. 217.951. Automo
-1 biles seized. 1922, 4; 1923, 11. Value
of property destroyed, 1922, $38,050.25;
1923, $56,216.80. Number prosecutions,
1922, 116; 1923, 147. Number arrests,
1922, 51; 1923, 73.
Clemency Asked For Sam Duckworth
Atlanta.—A petition seeking pardon
or parole for Sam Duckworth, Ameri
cus convict, now serving a life sen
tence on the Sumter county chaingang
for murder was presented to the state
prison commission. Duckworth, ac
cording to the petition, was convict
ad of the murder of his wife, Mrs.
'Pearl Dutkwdrth,\whose bofy was
found in a well near their home on
the farm of Green A. Perry, in Pleas
ant Grove neighborhood, during the
I winter of 1919. The following day
Duckworth was arrested at the home
of a relative near the Dooly-Sumter
I county line. While in a drunken con
| dition he is said to have confessed the
I crime.
| No Arrests Made in Bright Beating
l Macon.—-No arersts have been made
i in connection with the kidnaping of
' Mrs. Fredericka Pace, of New York,
i and Lynwood L. Bright, which occurred
I from the former’s automobile. Bright
l collapsed after a conference with his
lawyers. He is now being attended
iby a physician. An examination of
I his body in the presence of friends,
i according to the latter, disclosed 200
i welts, or lash marks. It was stated
j that there is not an inch on his back.
from his neck to his ankles, that is
i not scarred and in some cases the
i skin is broken.
Charge Check Raising
I Savannah. —Joseph Crauman. w?I.
I known young man. was placed under
| bond of $4,000 on a charge of rai ling
j four cheeks, SI,OOO bond for each cheek
■ alleged to have been ’‘improved."
j Two checks for $3 each had been
; raised to S3O and two for $4 had been
I increased to S4O each. It is said Cran-
I man denied connection with the rais
ing of the checks. He is a collector
for the Bevo company and the checks
were passed, it is said, in connection
i with his collections from soft drink
■ stands. Thoublew as experienced in
locating the person who had handled
the papers.
Sale Os Guernsey Cattle In Jackson
Jackson. —The sale of a car ol
> Guernsey cattle in Jackson was de
clared a complete success, buyers be
ing present from all parts of Georgia.
। Nine grade cows were sold at an aver
| age price of S9O. Eight pure-bred bulls
were sold at an average price of sllO.
one bull being knocked off at $320.
j An average price of SIBB was paid
■ for nine pure-bred cows and heifers.
। The top price paid for a cow was S3OO.
; Dr’ve Against Illegal Paregoric Sales.
Atlanta.—A campaign against the
! nale of paregoric to narcotic addicts
j was started in Atlanta recently wth
। the arrest of two druggists said to have
j been illegally purveying the product
which addicts are said to use when
. they are unable to secure other forms
of narrotirs. T. E. Middlebrook, chief
narcotic inspector, instituted the cam
i paign, and secured a number of war
| rants. Both druggists arrested fur
i , ; shed bond and were released
MRS. EARLS
TELLS WOMEN
How Backache and Periodic
Pains Yield to Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Olean, N. Y. — “Every month my
blood would go to my head and I would
havesucnaheadache,
nosebleed, backache
and pains that I could
not do my work. At
night I could not get
my rest and nothing
seemed to do me any
good. I read some of
your testimonials
about what Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound had
done for others, so I
decided to try it. I
had only taken two bottles when 1 began
to be better, and my back did not hurt
me nor my head ache. I felt like a new
woman. The Vegetable Compound is a
splendid medicine and I will always rec
ommend it.’’—Mrs. A. D. Earls, 530
N. 6th St., Olean, N. Y.
Mrs. Kelsey adds her Testimony
Copenhagen, N. Y.-“I read your
advertisement in the papers and my
husband induced me to take Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to get
relief from pains and weakness. I was
so weak that I could not walk at times.
Now I can do my housework and help
my husband out doors, too. I am willing
for you topublish this letter if you think
it will help others.”—Mrs. Herbert
Kelsey, R.F.D., Copenhagen, N.Y.
at ■ ■■ ■ to replace old,
Wf ri ®IF
11 V W 11 MB I
Tonic—-Don’t get bald, get Q-Ban today — It’s
much more pleasant. At all good druggists, €oc,
or direct from HLSSIG • ELUS, ChcsiiU, Netsphu, Ttaa.
EARLY SPE< KLED VELVET BEA^S FOR
SEED. $1.50 Bl WHEE
Bunch Velvet Beans, 11.75 bushel C. J.
LORI). R. 2. WRIGHTSVILLE, GEORGIA
WRITE FOR OUR IX)WEST PRICES
on genuine Catawba County grown cowpeas,
soy beans, peanuts, etc., best tn South.
CATAWBA SEED STORE, HICKORY. N. C,
— '
Deference to Example.
‘'Charley, dear," said young Mrs.
Torkins, "don’t you think a woman
: should be guided by the taste of her
j husband?”
“Os course.”
"So do I. That's why I’m going to
have my hair cut short and learn to
smoke.”
A inaa's strength Is esHinnted by
his abiliiy to flghtTigalnst odds.
liSirKNEF
There Was Nothing So Good
for Congestion and Colds
as Mustard
>ut the old-fashioned mustard
plaster burned and blistered while it
acted. Get the relief and help that
mustard plasters gave, without the
plaster and without the blister.
Musterole does it. It is a clean,
white ointment, made with oil of mus
tard. It is scientifically prepared, so
that it works wonders.
Gently massage Musterole in with the
finger-tips. See how quickly it brings re
lief-how speedily the pain disappears.
Try Musterole for sore throat, bron
chitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck,
asthma, neuralgia, headache, conges
tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago,
pains and aches of the back or joints,
sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil
blains, frosted feet, colds of the chest
(it may prevent pneumonia). 35c and
65c, jars and tubes; hospital size, $3 00.
Better than a mustard plaster
i -- —
^“Cutting teeth is made easy”j
MRS.WINSLOWS
7 SYRUP
77i« Infant** and Children* a Refalatcr
At al! druggists
Non-Narcotic, Non-Alcoholic
Oakland, Nebr., Feb. 28, 1920
Anglo-American Drug Co.,
Gentlemen:
I am more than glad to tell you
of the experience and result obtained
from your wonderful Baby Medicine.
Our second baby is now seven months
old and has never given us a moment’s
trouble. The first and only thins she
has ever taken was Mrs. Window's
Syrup. She has four teeth and is al
ways smiling and playing. Cuffing
teeth is made easy by the use of Mrs.
Winslow's Syrup. Most sincerely,
(Name on request}
ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO.
215^117 Fulton Street, New York
G«n. Selfing Agent* : Harold F. Ritchie & Co.. Im.
New York, Toronto, London, Sydney