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VNI) I’KACHLAND JOCKS VI.
ESTABLISHED 1888
!‘t HI.ISHKIi EVERY TIICKSDAY
JOHN II. JONHS
Editor and Owner
'"A* a Man Thinketh in Hit* Hrnrt. I
Official Oman • > reach County, ( ity o i
Valley mid Western Division T (h,
8ou(hern Ui*lr(rf of (jeo r k i j
f ederal ( ourl.
t A. feature S
Advert i (
Enlennl md-cli .matter at f.h
of fie ut Fort Va|l»*y, (•«., iiruLi
act of March H, 1X79.
SUKvSCRIPTION PRICES
(Payable in Advance*)
3 Year i
( Months
8 Mont hi* 1
• ADVERTISIN'); RATES
30c per Column Inch
lr per Word
) ««:n> Adv«*rti*cnu*nl.* Strictly ( ash in Ad* im
THURSDAY. APRIL 2.3. 192:.
Mi . Bernice Brown McCullur i> (*<:
jt.or of a new paper, the
Times, successor to the
News, which makes a highly intere
mg addition to our exchange table,
---
INTERESTING BOOKLET FROM
1 TIEITIHS COMMITTEE
Selling Georgia i: the powerful set
toon carried in a booklet issued by
Utilities Information Committee
Georgia. It carries ten editorials from
Georgians. We can say, with Pat (Inf
fin of Bainbridge, "of course the one
attributed to the editor of this paper
ts not so heavy but at the same time
we appreciate the company that we
have been put in. These editorials are
not at all controversial or critical of
anything now existent in the stute
hut they are indeed instructive and
have a tendency to do some good It
is n splendid booklet and one that will
do a great deal of good. This commit¬
tee is doing a great work and one that
will bring- big results in the long run.
The committee is really more in the
interest of the people than one sup¬
poses for the simple reason that it
seeks to let the people know more of
their utilities.”
PLEASANT WORDS FROM
SUBSCRIBERS
Many subscribers, in paying up for
The Leader-Tribune, have said kind
words during the last two weeks. Fair I
samples: R. C. Halliburton of Grovau
ia writes that "You deserve every pen- j
n.v you get. Your paper is EXCEL
LENT." G. A. Lamar writes from
Powersville: "I appreciate your paper
and the efforts you are putting forth
to make it more efficient. I feel as if |
the week would be amiss without a
copy of The Leader-Tribune." Others
have written in a similar vein from
near and far, while scores of subscrih
ers have culled in person with expres¬
sions of hearty approval. One of our
best friends, by the way, in paying up
his subscription, said he would keep
on taking the paper if we would put |
something in it besides articles about
the Peach Blossom Festival, Abso¬
lutely l ight. There’s a large part <>: F
the year in which the Beach Blos
stmt Festival is off the stage. We < I tv
building a NEWSPAPER here. ■
OFF TO NEW YORK
Mildred Bryant provides for us te
live a few weeks longer. He bring- m
a fine home-cured ham on subset -i
tion. It will revive our skeleton wher.
wo return in about ten days from a
fish-feeding ocean trip to Noo Yawk.
Yell! We’re going on our centennial
Spring trip to li’l ol’ Noo Yawk. Gonna
spend two or three days there. Gonna
park right on Fifth avenue enduring
the whole time, using what the W os
,
leyan girl-editor said Johnny Spen¬
cer was glad he didn’t lose instead of
part of an ear. Gonna finish up the
balance of those stories that Tom
Flournoy missed when he stopped on
the fourteenth, according "to his talk
before the Kiwanis Club lust Friday, j
Gonna come home hungry, beloved
subscribers—hungry, but with all ! four ! I
b^ting lees kick in iz ; ^ i, t0 ° t,ntf
boosting-horn. horn
.SPIRITUAL HEALING AND THE
NEW TESTAMENT
m, The lectures * , _ by Rev. I |
Thomas Park
er Boyd of San Francisco, Cal., on
New Testament Spiritual Healing, giv¬ ;
en at St. Andrew’s Church last week j
were gratefully received by those who 1
availed themselves of this rare privi- I
lege. Rev. .
Boyd showed himself a |
master of his subject and the results '
of a lifetimeapplication to the study
of this almost lost art* were clearly :
and plainly' shown to those who seek
first, the Kingdom i
of God.
Unflattering Ccgnomen
Goober I’edy. the home of the
fat) ous South Australian black qial. f
Is 1(H) miles from anyliere ami proba¬ V
bly lie must primitive \ Page in Hie
Brfish empire. Tiie Australian blacks
christened it Goober ivdy. or “white
man living in a bole." and it is said to
well deserve its name.
A DAHA PRAYER
1.
Bright a- Mount Everest that, g
With the first rays of dawning
And as the sun’s life-giving beams
That uhser in resplendent May,
Make me, dear Lord, I humbly
True a- the needle to the pole,
Though storms convulse life’s
sea,
Cause me to he in mind and soul,
And my affection fix on Thee,
The Way, the Truth, and make
free.
3.
The flowers of the field arc
Thou givest them their
j bright;
So clothe my soul and make it
«
And give me with Thy Spirit's
, Thou Source of love ami life and
4.
And at eve’s decline the sun
No more illumes the land and sea
Dwell in my heart, Thou holy
And make me like Thyself to be
jin love and Christian ministry.
....... W. (’. CARTER.
\KW BAPTIST CHURCH
The Dorothy King Baptist Mission
(;hurch church on Fair Ground street
has been formally organized, where
services are held each Sunday with
>Sab bath School in the afternoon,
j city The of building three has a seating capa¬
hundred, is an attrac¬
tvic wooden frame building and is a
distinct addition to that to that sec¬
tion of the town.
| The church has been cailed Doro¬
thy King as a tribute to Mr. J. K.
King, Superintendent of the Cotton
Mills, which are situated in that sec¬
tion. Mr. King is held in high esteen
by alt the mill people and it was their
pleasure to call the mission Dorothy
Klng * honorin * Mr - Kin * by calling
the Church the name of his little
daughter.
A pastor has not been called, but
Mr. Frank McDern.id, Foreman of the
mills leads the services or furnishes
smite visitor to lead. Church people
throughout the city are interested and
* ake pa,b * n activities of the Mis
sa>n ’
——— ------------
JUNIOR WOMAN S CLUB
The Junior Club of Fort Valley,
which lias recently been organized
elected the following officers: Mrs.
Raul Murray, president; Miss Emily
Braswell, secretary,
The organization has been perfected
a full corps of officers have not
elected, this having been post
pending the return from col¬
of a number who are expected
become members*, after which the
of officers will take place.
Franklin and His Kite
Of timely Interest, In view of recent
b'U 1 >l cast upon Benjamin Franklin's
kite experiment, is die recent discov¬
ery of a letter written by Franklin on
llie subject In a book published in
London In 1774, now In the library of
I he Franklin In-dliute, Philadelphia,
says Popular Science Monthly, A fter
how to make Hie kite with
pointed wire on Hie upright stick,
Franklin says:
‘ As soon as any of the thunder
come over the kilo, the pointed
will draw the electric tire from
and the kite, with all the twine,
be electrified, and the loose fila¬
of the twine will stanti out
way and he attracted by an ap
finger."
a Sit on the Woolsack »*
fids expression signifies “To he lord
of England The lord
presiding officer of the
of lords, occupies a seat on a
stuffed with wool, It is a
square bag of wool, without
or arms, and covered with red
l, * , h- I" Queen Elizabeth's reign. an
A "' 1 !’ !,sse ' 1 o prevent the expor
‘ >f w ° o1 from Kn * ,0 ‘"i «»*< *’»
woolen manufacture. In or
" r «"« the national
should he kept constantly in
wool sacks were placed In the
of lords, where the Judges sat.
Teaching Parrots to Talk
The bureau of biologic! survey says
bard and fast rule can be laid
for teaching a bird to talk. This
entirely a matter of patience -and
in dealing with tiie bird.
: ' r 't the bird should be kept In a
by itself, and the cage covered to
three sides. Du not talk to the
: i except in repeating simple
over and over again. Only
phrase should he used in a single
iv la ttie early training.. Gradually
1 . 1 -n111 several phrases arc repea t
over and over to the bird each day.
Earth Likened to Flywheel
I’iie naval ot ■servatory say s that Hie
® 8 globular mass, rigid as steel,
freely in space, There is no
ietioii i„ to this i ot at ion and no
1 'Csequen ly there is no
3'e eirth is of>-n likened to
.aumniso ’l.vwluvl and to anyone It
h:vs seen a la y wheel of steel
silent iy. Ini with great ra- 5
: e ••oiiq ,\ i s striking.
to
THE LEADER-YRIBUNE, FORT VA t r FV GA.. THURSDAY. APRIL 23, 192').
Here’s Occasion When
It Really Was
A Connecticut correspondent
ns : Heading in the Companion
ly of a Vermonter who invented u
ing muehlne witli which he tlew
the top of u high mountain and
on a rock with such force that
drove bin feet, into the ledge clear
to bis hips and again a little later
a Westerner who sawed a
gray squirrel In two one winter's
without waking him reminds me of
story told by my grandfather. He
lived in a very bleak corner <lr Con¬
necticut in the early days when fire¬
places were the only means of heat¬
ing, it seemed impossible for him to
warm the house. At last he became
desperate, and, going into the-cellar
where (here was a large tireplaee, he
packed It full with several cords of
good hard wood, set It all atire and
then went upstairs to bed. *
The next morning he got up early,
hoping to find the house worm, hut
the rooms were as cold as ever; so he
went out of doors to see If smoke were
coming out of tlie chimney. To his
amazement he saw the flames standing
up out of lhe chimney four or five feet
high, frozen solid!—Youth's Com
pan Ion.
Twain Had Weakness
for Southern Cooking
AXara ’J wulu, In his Autoblograpliy,
pays tribute to iioutliern dishes, such
as, for Instance, corn bread, hot bis¬
cuits, wheat breud and fried chicken.
"These things, lie says, “have never
been properly cooked in the Nvrth—
in fact, no one there Is able to learn
the art, so far as my experience goes.
The North thinks it knows bow to
make corn bread, hut this Is mere
superstition. Perhaps no bread In the
world Is quite so good as Southern
corn bread and perhaps no bread In
the world is quite so bad as the North¬
ern Imitation of It. The North seldom
tries to fry chicken, and this Is well;
the art cannot he learned north of the
line of Mason and Dixon, nor any
where In Europe. Thl* is not hearsay ;
it Is experience that is speaking. In
Europe is it Imagined that the custom
of serving various kinds of bread bluz
Ing hot Is ‘American,’ hut that Is too
broad n spread; it Is custom In the
South, but Is much less than that in
ttie North."
Wet Shoes
If you are caught In a rain and get
your shoes wet do something to coun
teract the possible effects If you ean
not get home to change your footwear.
Business people who are caught this
way know how uncomfortable It ia to
go around in damp shoes and many of
effects them know something about the eUl |
t lint often result.
It Is a simple matter to lay a few
blotters on top of each other and
stand on them a few minutes. You
will he surprised how much dampness
the blotters will absorb. Even if you
are on a shopping tour you can pur¬
blotters and take this precuu
If Hie shoes have become very wet
thoroughly soaked, place a blotter
the stocking and shoe for a
minutes. This is a safety-first
that may avert a cold or
serious illness.
a Association Test
It was resolved In the Continental
March 4, 1776, and the re¬
approved by Hie committee of
nt Exeter, April 12, that ali
above twenty-one years of ngy
Idiots and negroes exceptedi
be asked' to sign the Associa¬
test, whose text wits us follows:
the subscribers, do solemnly en
and promise that we will, to the
of our power, at the risk of
lives and fortunes, with arms, op¬
Hre hostile proceedings of the
Heels and armies against the
Slates colonies."
The Eye Appeal
One ot tiie chief differences between
an art as Homer’s and such an
as Dame’s or Miltou’s is that Ho¬
never thinks of any appeal but j
the ear; whereas Dante and )
both know their verses will
with eyes as well as ears. Their
Is certainly not greater than Ho¬
but It lias finer modulations of
The thing is, that Dante
Milton, like every oilier printed or
poet, take advantage of the
without losing the ear-ap¬
Abercrombie.
Use for Old Newspapers
Merchants in the countries of the It
East depend wholly on tbe supply
discarded American newspapers as
for purchases in their shops.
of tons of whole and dean
are being sltippad monthly
the Far East from Atlantic coast
Tills business formerly fell al¬
exclusively to Facitic coast deal
but with tbe outbreak of the World
the Eastern firms began purehas- i
Hie newspapers from junkmen for ; its
shipment.
Strength of Beetles
observations of tiie beetle
It lias tremendous power. So far
power has been set at 112 times
own weight. A captive beetle was on
under a large milk bottle made
heavy glass. In a short time tiie
was pushing the bottle ahead of for
at a steady and good pace. Another
was made to climb an incline of
dragging a weight equal to on
grains. The weight was attached
Us leg bv a silk thread.
DEPICT CUSTOMS
OF BYGONE
( Lettters Show Etiquette
'
Seventeenth Century.
Liverpool.—Letters nn<J other
merits dealing with manners and c
h j nifi of dally life in the
J ( I century lend which came to light
to show that it was customary
I those days for -persons of quality"
have sets of their own spoons,
urni forks which they took with
when Invited out.
These papers are of particular
terest just at tills time tu collectors
antiques in connection with an
Uon made recently to the British
seum. This was the earliest
murkerl table fork known,
with the crest of Manners &
1632. About the same time a
spoon of Identical hall-mark and
was taken to 11 addon hall.
Hooks on etiquette and table
ners were Tar from being the
tlve of the Victorian »g_, -. It is
__ _
vealed, as In 1063 there was
in London a book entitled "The
complished Lady’s Rich Closet of
ities, iri which the following rules
laid down :
“A gentlewoman being ut
abroad or ut home must observe to
keep the hotly straighte, and lean not
by any means uj-on her elhowes—nor
by ravenous gesture discover a vora¬
cious appetite. Talke not when you
have meate In your mouth; and do
not smacke like a pig—or eat speene
meat so hot that tears stand In your
eye*.
•it i* very uncourtiy to drink *o
Mmost" gone^aml' hiu ^’re forced to
blow strongly to recover yourself
Throwing down your liquor as into a
funnel Is an action titter for a Juggler
than a gentlewoman.
te carving at your own table dls
tribute the best pieces first, and it will
a fork; so touch no meat without it."
Reference to the fork was of par
tlcular Interest to the museum author
Itles, for those present-day IndlapensH- I,eel.
hie instruments bad no, then long
introduced, It appears.
Forks were first Imported from
Italy, and their use In England a, the
time was considered pedantic and
One writer of the time
of a silver fork as "being used
late by some of our spruce gal¬
which did not tend to make tl.e
popular at all among certain
Graduate Hall
Once Was Private Fort
New York.—Local tradition has It
the newly opened Graduate hall
New York university was the pri
fortress of a successful business
of little old New York during the
war. He had Joined the fashion¬
migration from the heart of the
below Fourteenth street to the
of the Bronx, where the low¬
of cows was not to give way to the
of the "I." for more than half u
Tlils timorous gentleman was ex¬
nervous about Hie possibility
southern gunboats invading the
river and because of ills fea rs
bis bouse Into u veritable for¬
with gray stone walls from two
four feet thick. From the square
tower, which served as il !
lie had a view of the snr- I
country ns far as Gong is¬ j
sound and New York bay.
With rare his foresight house the emigre sur- j
with a moat 20
wide. A drawbridge extended I
It from tlie front entrance to the
After the danger of Confeder !
shells and draft riots disappeared, I
owners probably decided that ■
although picturesque, was not
practical as a veranda, which now
surrounds the house. Shortly
the Civil war the moat was
in.
Town Sinking
Into Old Mine Workings
Halieyville, Okla.—Slowly sinking
the bed of a lake, this little
town, nestled In the hills of
Oklahoma, Is making
progress toward oblivion.
by Inch Halieyville has
Wider and wider, but
that the eye cannot perceive
movement, great cracks in the
are widening and pushing for¬
years ago there was a solid
of good coal under tbe town,
Is built lu a cup of the hills.
was mined out of the old Hatle.v
mine and the mine aban¬
l’illars held up the tunnels,
In time water seeped In.
Halieyville is built on the
of a subterranean lake. The pil
are shifting and the crust is’sink
into the five-foot depth of the lake ,
!
say there Is no chance to
the earth shift until it lias found
own bottom. Whether Halieyville
have to be rebuilt on the lulls de¬
on what is found when the
finally stops, they said.
Shows Thirty-Six Miles
Aires.—The most powerful :
in South America, situated
the Island of E! Rincon, off Bahia
Argentina, was placed in oper¬
recently, Its beams are visible
30 miles. g
more lighthouses farther south
the Patagonian coast will be in
within a month, making
much easier for ships
tor South Atlantic regions.
COLLEGE ENROLL^
5 OF ONE
Two Others Expected to
^Institution Later.
1 Sioux Falls, S. I».—Seven uiem!
of one family enrolled in an
tion of higher learning within a
Hde, is the record made by the Fr
family ot Doland, S. L>. '1 ids
has been represented at the South
kota Agricultural coll eg*? bv
children, live >f them heijug
and two »t present on their way to
possession of degrees.
j name of Fryer has been
. tlouotisly on the college r ill
Entering that year, Miv*
i 3 r y ( * r completed tlie home
course In 1UJG, and has since
teaching tint subject in the Hawaii
islands, the first male member of ti
i family to east his educational lot v.
the .agricultural college was
I Frv'vf « ho enrolled in pharmacy
[ 1920 i-nti completed Ids
I course on schedule time.
! The family is still represented
the agricultural college by Ja
Fryer, a junior electrical enstii
a ad Alice Fryer, a freshman h
economies student. The college
<*als feel certain the name of
W, P remain on the roll for at
two years more, and probably for
eral years after that, as two
boys are still at home, one in
school and the other in the
grade,
Milling Values Drop as
Production Increases
w «*b!ngton.-Marked decreases
«>e v «> u « f the output of two major
^^"mi “ D<J T^ bm ^ ^ ere T 8how ^ " ia
figUre S "’f/ , f pub,lc hy M ,e c?nsus ba¬
, L V C0!aparw ' w ‘ lh ««’•
179 740 m
j ! Lt Ir.n “ ’I™ T * "" <,uaatlty ut
n ’
L ^ rv T ,, , ' P . ,' , ,, 7uT , f
| S l831 ” 97 ' of u J W cent.
L ZT *'* , V ‘«* lu 0f ^cent wh ** t flour to .$000,454,819. otttpBt
^ f' rr l S nT t ‘ / ? Se ° 11 f 3 " -4r»l.41 4 :*
,vr
™ ZL7e* SlT"’ “
pier cent to
*a 127,117 In value and 12 per cent to
12.244.729 barrels in quantity.
Despite ttie 20.9 per cetit Increase
In the production of rye flour, ti '.*•
value decreased 24.6 per cent, while
buckwheat flour decreased "4.S per
^ a, J n QUftr " i '- v anti - a - 3 i ,Pr «at in
The tolal output of heet sugar in
dusiry for 1923 comprised 749.447 tons
of granulated sugar valued at SU2.-
384,386; 5.012 tons of raw- sugar val¬
ued at $409,258; 17.966.537 gallons ,
molasses valued at $1,237,453, and
pulp valued nt $3,707,80". Production
of granulated sugar decreased 26 8 per
cent iu quantity and 12 per cent ia
value.
Forgotten, Rooster Has
Riding Spree on Trains
Winchester, Vu.—A big red rooster,
shipped from Toms Brook, Va., on the
Southern railway, to Middletown. Va.,
on the Baltimore & ohi o railroad, a
distance of a dozen miles, finally ar¬
rived nt its destination, flapping and
crowing after passing through three
states and the District of Columbia.
a Journey of more than 150 miles, An
express messenger had forgot to put
tl>e rt >uster off at Strasburg Junction.
In Its rumblings tbe bird caught
glimpses of Shenandoah, Warren,
•'“"fluier, Prince William, Fairfax
Arlington counties lu Virginia,
then crossing the Potomac river ami
a night at the national cap¬
The following day tt doubled
toward Virginia, touching Mont¬
Frederick and Washington
In Maryland, Jefferson In
Virginia, and Clarke and Fred¬
In Virginia. Half a day was
here, and finally, late tn the
tbe bird was sent to Middle
No Help for Deer
Flagstaff, Ariz,.—Efforts of man to
the plight of thousands of
starving in the Kaibab national
have met with failure. George
veteran cattleman, con¬
the futility of an attempt to
a herd across the inaccessible
of the Grand canyon of the
river.
Chamois, Losing Sight,
End Lives on Rocks
Berlin.—A tragic epidemic is
befalling the last of Europe's
most graceful animals, the Al¬
pine chamois. They are becom¬
ing blind.
In fall and winter villagers
have been amazed to see chain¬
ois stray into woods near vil
lages and die there. The cham
ois is known as the most shy of
animals, i which, even when starv¬
ing, prefers dying in peaceful
surroundings to depending on
villages for food, Now it Is
discovered that the chamois are
becoming blind and that many
of them, when they realized
they were near villages, delib¬
erately smashed their heads
against rooks to end their suf¬
fering.
ant
HATE: 1 cent . #r word. N»
taken for It*** rh*n 25c for first insertion.
Ut in
Jit mts Tt
d; t 1 if
U*
raw
from
to do
! In ad 1
! r< . We other can inf no; not of ied in
ttxt-ra or jrmat •n
tm* advtrtisemenln.
When replies ar« received care thi.*
paper, douOit* ratv.
While we do r .crept advertisement*
which hs ren to believe are of a
f;atur< hi no mean* of a»
ainirttf the ibility of all advertia
! FOR SALE A.-paragus Seed. G. II.
Cleveland, Phone 1903. 4-9-3tpd.
FOR SALE—Few tor- mixed pea vine
and erabera hay. Petty T
double jc a ted c >tton
. M. R. I. - 4-S-3tpd,
OR SALE OR KENT Will sell
rent my street,
fter Junt 1st. J. S. appey, 28a
; lrginiti anta, Ga. 4-9-41,
I ccL'-rv t-L-T- BEANS—Ninety day
SEED i-t-f \ ELS El \ . i
speckled velvet beans for seed, , rr two
idollars , ,, ($2) ...... per bushel , . , .. f. b. , here. .
o.
(.ash with , order. , No .. order , for . less ,
than one bushel. Sessions Trading Co..
I Enterprise, Ala. 4-16-2.
RENT—Desirable home, centra!
location. See E. T. Murray, Bank of
< Vort 4-24-tf,
WANTED—Mattresses to renovate.
We also make new- ones. .We call
and deliver. T. F. Sheats, ’phone
8 ‘ 4 ' 9 ' 4tpd ’
FOR RENT—Back room of building
in center of business districts, easily
accessible by alley with none except
private entrance to room. Size about
25x30 feet. Apply Leader-Tribune. I
4-23-lt.
FOR SALE—400 bushels good ear
corn. A. B. Young, 4-23-Ltp.
WANTED—Two or three furnished
rooms for lighthouse keeping. Har¬
ry Chewning, Fort Valley Motor Co.
4-23-21
FOR SALE Practically new, up¬
right, standard make piano, phone
358. 4-23-2t
Flies in Winter
Experimeiiis have shown that the
cold weather may he passed "toy the
fly in tiie I'Tvul and pupal stage's.
British >.-lentil s, ofrer prolonged ex
periments, failed to had a single over
wintering adult huso th But there
is eonuueruole discrepancy d ohser
cation on this subject, although it is
true that tli tally population would be
mer helming if the cold of winter
did not check its activities.
* i
: ITCHING ECZEMA !
< DRIED RIGHT UP :
t BY THIS SULPHUR i
fiery, Any breaking out of the skin, even
itching eczema, can be quicklv
overcome Sulphur, by applying a little Mentho
Because says a noted skin specialist.
of its germ destroying proper¬
ties. this sulphur preparation instantly
brings ease from skin irritation, soothes
and heals the eczema right up and
leaves the skin clear and smooth.
t It seldom tails to relieve the torment
and disfigurement. Sufferers from skin
trouble should get a little jar of Rowles
Mentho-Sulphur from any good drug
gist and use it like a cold cream
Friendly Hotel
Invites you to
o4tlanta
RATES: Circulating i c e
One Person 'vater and ceil¬
$2.50, $3.00 y. ing fans in
every
$3.50, $4,00 C room.
Ss.oe ■Pl|| r;
L'Essf c?*!b ere Ml Atlanta’s newest
Two Persons > e and finest hotel.
$4.50, C 4
$5.00 B r r. C P C j
$6.00, $7.00 r.Bi -nr? k t J
9 ft f Magnificent ap¬
:i n g pointments.
The best place in s
Atlanta to eat. [s ■
S dining rooms Special arrange¬
and al fresco ter¬ ments for hand¬
race. ling automobile
parties. Garage.
The HENRY GRADY Hotel
550 Rooms—550 Baths
Corner Peachtree and Cain Streets
JAMES F. deJARNETTE, V.-p. & Mgr. THOS. j. KELLEY, Asso. Mgr.
The Following Hotels Are Also' Cannon Operated:
GEORGIAN HOTEL JOHN C. CALHOUN HOTEL
Athens, Ga. Anderson, S. C.
W. H. CANNON, Manager D. T. CANNON. Manager
J
'A Sweet Breath
at all times /
/tl
1 ! <
fes
■j \ \ - \ e<iZL 4 f «■
i SJ r N
After ratine or smoking
Wri^Iey and s freshen* the breath. the mouth
sweeten*
Nerves are soothed, throat Is
refreshed and digestion aided
So easy to carry the little packet*
- after etfery tnealf„)§
SHOES ARE GOING If—Win ?
Shoes are going up because YOU
are throwing away good shoe uppers
—that ought to be saved. You can
reduce the slaughter of calves now
. not , throwing those old ,, shoes ,
away
which ... shold , ,, be , resoled , , for „
rasnv
weeks , and moths of additional wear,
Shoe , An , * , ***• ^ , y P^teaBy ° U f kn °" that as good a f so,ed as a
new shoe and that is far more com -
fortable ? Have your shoes rebuilt
here. We will save you some money
and at the same time give you foot
comfort and good appearance.
DIXON’S SHOE SHOP
Shoe Rebuilders
4-16-2t.
Figh Despondency
R U every man's duty to labor In
his calling and nor to despond for any
miscarriage or disappointments that
were not it. his own power to prevent.
— Exchange.
_
• OPEN NOSTRILS! END
A COLO OR CATARRH -
:
- How To Get Relief When Head
• and Nose are Stuffed Up.
fount fifty; 4 our coki in head or
catarrh disappears. \our Hogged no*
triL will often, the air passages of your
bead will clear and you can breathe
freelv. No more snuffling, hawking,
mucous discharge, dryness or headache;
no Get struggling for breath at night.
a small bottle of Ely's Cream
BGm from your druggist, and apply a
little of this fragrant antiseptic cream
in your nostrils. It penetrates through
every air passage of the head, soothing
am * healing the swollen or inflamed mu
membrane, giving you instant re
, 0,<l3 fm<l catarrh yield like
. tUffed Md i
» a^. ' UP ” * r '
RED PEPPER FOR
Red Pepper Rub takes the "ouch”
sore, stiff, aching joints. It can¬
hurt you, and it certainly stops that
rheumatism torture at once.
When you are suffering so you can
get around, just try Red Pepper
and you will have the quickest re
known. Nothing has such conceii
penetrating heat as red peppers.
5 t as soon will as feel you apply Red Pepper
you the tingling heat. In
minutes it warms the sore spot
and through. Pain and sore
are gone
Ask any good druggist for a jar of
Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to
the genuine, with the name Rowle*
each package