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PRESIDENT COOLITREES
TOLERANCE
The following forms a part of the on Oct. 6. This address has been
epeech of President Coolidge before claimed as peculiarly timely and
th. American Legion at Omaha, Neb., ting and is herewith reproduced
■Telephone 47—
Purest Drugs Best Drinks
Prescriptions ANDERSON and Cigars Ice Cream and
Carefully Filled Cigarettes
Toilet Articles DRUG CO. Candies and
Stationery Flowers
—Telephone 48—
POINTING
THE WAY
Many of our customers, after long experience with us, will
point with a positive hand to our shop as the place which, given
the care of your clothes, will make you happy. It’s a great thing
to KNOW that your Suit or Dress will be given prompt attention
in cleaning and pressing and will be returned to you with GREAT
CARE. Our reputation is maintained by painstaking SERVICE.
The reliable—
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THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., THURSDAY, OCTOBE R 22, 1925.
the interest of those engaged in
building a greater Georgia.
“Progress depends very largely on
the encouragement of variety. What¬
ever tends to standardize the com
munity, to establish fixed and rigid
modes of thought, tends to fossilize
society.
“It is the ferment of ideas, the
clash of disagreeing judgments, the
privilege of the individual to develop
his own thought and shape his own
character that makes progress pos¬
sible.
“Many useful things are learned
from those who disagree with us,
and even when we can gain nothing
our differences are likely to do us
no harm.
“Among some of the varying ra¬
cial, religious and social groups of
our people there have been mani
festations of an intolerance of opin
ion, a narrowness of outlook, a fixity
of judgment, against which we may
well be warned. It is not easy to con¬
ceive of anything that would he
more unfortunate in a community
based upon the ideals of wjiich
Americans boast than any consider
able development of intolerance as
regards religion. Instead of a' state
church we have decreed that every
citizen shall be free to follow the
dictates of his own conscience as to
his religious beliefs and affiliations.
Under that guaranty we have erected
a system which certainly is justified
by its fruits. Under no other could
we have dared to invite the peoples
of all countries and creeds to come
here and unite with us in creating
the state of which we are all citi
zens.
“The bringing together of all these
different national, racial, religious
and cultural elements has made our
country a kind of composite of the
rest of the world. Every one of them
has something characteristic and sig¬
nificant of great value to cast into
the common fund of our material,
intellectual and spiritual resources.
“Granting first the essentials of
loyalty to our country and to our
fundamental institutions, we may en¬
courage differences of opinion as to
other things. For differences of this
kind will certainly be elements of
strength rather than of weakness. I
recognize the full and complete ne
fi PER CENT
FARM LOANS
6 PER CENT
AN UNLIMITED SUPPLY OF
MONEY
To place on desirable Peach, Hous¬
ton, Martm and Crawford County
farms By
N. P. BASSETT
FORT VALLEY, GA.
Phones 22 and 2004. |
6 % 10 YEARS 6 %
PAINTS <
■ . and
BRUSHES
\ .V • - ,
A ’V 4
A'Stf. (a .vvfv;;
f]
'-'V' ■ ' • $ ' *
VI-'&Y*!' • ■*Ttfi. 7
'/:/ ,
w H:
»/l m <1 py«r,\N5 k
.A
uj. V
1
We sell WARREN’S BEST
PAINT—a good Paint AT *4
LESS than you have been pay¬
ing for the SAME GRADE of
Paint.
See us before you buy.
*■ •/
t IT’S GUARANTEED!
I Fort Valley
Lumber Co.
MARVELS OF PRODUCTION
METHODS BEING SHOWN
The marvels of modern automotive
precision and production methods are
depicted in a series of 42 enlarged
photographs now being shown to the
public at the salesrooms of all Ameri
can and Canadian Chevrolet dealers.
cessity of one hundred per cent
Americanism, but one hundred per
cent Americanism may be made
of many various elements.
“If we are to have that
and tranquillity, that union of
which is the foundation of real
tional genius and national
we must all realize that there are
true Americans who did not happen
to be born in our section of the
try, who do not attend our place
■religious worship, who are not
our racial stock or who are not pro¬
ficient in our language. If we are to
create on this continent a free re¬
public and an enlightened civiliza¬
tion that will be capable of reflect¬
ing the true greatness and glory of
mankind, it will be necessary to re
gard these differences as accidental
and unessential.
“We shall have to look heyond the
outward manifestations of race and
creed. Divine Providence has not
bestowed upon any race a monopoly
0 f patriotism and character.”
* For All
m
The Family _
»
«< We use Black-Draught
Am in our family of six children
M and find it a good liver and m
m bowel regulator,” says Mrs. Wf
C. E. Nutt, of Mineral
$1 Springs, Ark. "Ihavetaken Ik
it myself in the last two or g}
three years for indigestion. ! y,
2 ^ and would feel stomach, dizzy, have also feel gas ^
sour
a thickness in my chest. I’d *•
$1 take a good dose of
BLACK-DRAUGHT
when I felt that way, and it
would relieve me, and 1
would feel better for days.
biliousness. “My husband He takes he it for
says has
never he has found the tired, its equal. heavy When feel¬
ing, night he takes morning Black-Draught for few
and a
days and he doesn’t com¬
plain I any more. do recommend
• • sure
Thedford’s Black-Draught.” the largest
Your liver is
or gan in order, your body. Wn en
out of it causes many
complaints. Put your liver
in sha pe by taking Thed
ford’s Black-Draught.
Sold Everywhere
KX-Ul
^1111111111^
The photographic series covers the
same interesting operations in the
manufacture of Chevrolet cars which
would be shown a visitor at the fac¬
tories.
One of the most spectacular pic¬
tures shows a huge drop forge ham¬
mer weighing 140,000 pounds. Ham¬
mers of this type are used in making
the Chevrolet crankshaft. The falling |
weight is a three-ton block of steel
which is lifted the by touch steam. of It the is skilled so re- j
sponsive to ^
operators that they are able to place
a watch on the bottom die block and
strike it with the hammer so deli
cately that the crystal remains un
broken. Each hammer will forge 880
crankshafts during a 10-hour day.
Other striking features of the ex
hibit are pictures of a monster ma
chine which uses 300,000 amperes of J
electricity to weld the Chevrolet one- |
piece banjo-tpe rear axle housing; a
machine which drills 32 holes simul
taneously in the bottom of the Chev¬
rolet cylinder block; a rotary milling
machine which finishes at one opera¬
tion the lower sides of six cylinder
blocks and a 62-ton press which
forms a Chevrolet fender at one
stroke.
I The individual grinding of valves,
i WR1GLEYS
j
after <
EVERY
7
Probably one #1;
reason for the
popularity of
YVRIGLEY’S i* that it iaxt*
so long and returns such
great dividends for so small
an outlay. * It keeps teeth
clean, breath sweet, appetite
keen, digestion good.
Fresh and full-flavored
always in it* wax-wrapped
*tr package.
i
'
mi
A
SPECIALS SPECIALS
SATURDAY and MONDAY, OCT. 24 and 26
Best Yd. Sheeting, regular lie Boys’ Winter Union 39c
17 1 ic Special Suits unbleached. Special
Good regular heavy 20c. Outing, Special 15c Undershirts. Ladies’ Winter Special 65c
..........
Southern Silk Cheviots, 19c Ladies Outing 95c
regular 25c. Special Gowns. Special ___________________
9-4 Unbleached Sheeting, 35c $1.00 Men’s Work $ 2.95
regular 50c _______________ Shoe. Special ______
One lot Suiting 19c $1.50 Men’s Caps. $ 1.00
regular 35c _ ------------- Special __________________ L
Heavy Cotton Flannel, 19c Yund Kennedy and Y'und Heavy $4.75
regular 30c ...................... Coat Sweaters. Special
Dress A Special Ginghams 15c One Silk lot Hose. Ladies' Special 49c
___________
54-in. Dress Flannels, $ 2.35 Regular $1.25 75c
Regular S2.75 ............. Silk Ilose. Special
51-in.Bordered Regular $3.25 Twill, $ 2.69 Silk Regular Hose $1.50 $ 1.15
___________
40-in. Satin Back Crepe, $ 2.69 Regular $2.00 Full Fashioned $ 1.50
r
Regular $3.25 ................._..... Silk Hose. Special ____________________
Special lot 98c Ladies’ Jersey Silk Undies in $ 2.65
Crepe de Chine ______________ Knickers, Gowns, Slips, Etc.....
A good 220-wt. $ 1.25 Men's Lumber Jack $ 1.95
Blue Overall Flannel Shirts ___________________
Finck and Hapgrade § 1.75 A good heavy $ 1.95
Overalls ...................... Work Sweater
r
Golden Rule Chambray 85c Ladies’ Bed 75c
Work Shirt .................. Room Slippers
A good blue 69c Men's Regular $ 22.95
Work Shirt $35.00 Suits
A good heavy $ 1.00 Boys’ Short Pants $ 6.49
Union Suit for Men Suits __________|__
Boys’ E. Z. Union Suits 69c Ladies’ $ 1.69
Unbleached. Special Ginghams Dresses
Come in and look over this ivonderful stock of me
chandise and compare prices, and ice feel sure that you
ivill be able to supply your wants right here.
THE WILSON COMPANY, Inc. a
MACON STREET FORT VALLEY, GA.
the delicate balancing of pistons so
that every piston in each motor
weighs the same and many interest¬
ing micrometric inspections also are
illustrated in the remarkable exhibit.
PAY YOUR SUBSCRIPTION
+++ M ' i 'l l »'H;
< ■ NEW PRICES ON DAIRY PRODUCTS! 4::
J J . > ►
j Now in Effect.
«
\ Sweet Milk in pint bottle* _____ 10c Mck
_____....
Sweet Milk in quart bottle* _______ 15c each < ►
; Buttermilk 5c quart
................. .......
.
Butter at market price. < *
, 40c pint
Cream........................ .........
,
| Term*: Ca*b in advance or strictly weekly.
J Sanitary Dairy ►
■ W. J. Braswell’s
Dairy Phone 3303 Fort Valley, Ga. Res. Phone 131 *4
Ladies Attending the
Georgia State Exposition «
should shop at
THE ROYAL
Macon's Only Special Price
Shoe Store Exclusively For Women
Fashionable Footwear at
.> *6 $7
(None Higher)
Also a Complete Stock of
COMMON SENSE FOOTWEAR t
ranging in prices from
sj.oo to $ 3.75
and
PHENIX SILK HOSE
at
SJ.OO $ J.50 SJ.85
414 THIRD STREET
MACON, GEORGIA
Hall’s Catarrh
»» Medicine will do what wf
claim for te¬
nd your system of Catarrh or Deafness
caused by Catarrh.
Sold by druttiili for ortt 40 rrart
R J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo, Ohia