The leader-tribune. (Fort Valley, Peach County, Ga.) 192?-current, November 05, 1925, Image 7

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Iwl ss% p/. A* VvSS/ Mi <4 OFFICIAL Fort of the ORGAN THE KIWANIS KALL and BUY Get AT Full HOI Value A. s Valley Kiwanis Club Published Weekly Thursday by the Kiwanis Club of Fort Valley, Ga. for Your Money on Volume 2. ••• -frir Here’s the beverage that delights taste, satisfies thirst and refreshes. Every bottle is sterilized—insur ing absolute purity Fort Valley im Bottling Co i r W. (i. RRISMNDINE. KIWANIAN m J. W. Woolfolk W. L. Snow Ralph Newton J. W. Woolfolk & Co. Spray Material, Peas & Peaclies Fort Valley, Georgia HOTEL WINONA EMORY COPI’EDGE, Proprietor izikte: KIWANIAN Your account, whether large or small, respectfully solicited on the basis of sincere appreciation. ■ 3 PROMPT COURTEOUS SJ EFFICIENT v SERVICE Bank of Fort Valley < H. Y. KELL CO. FORT VALLEY, GA. Strictly Wholesale Phone 276 Full Stocks Prompt Service 8* C. L. FARMER, Mgr. ’ Kiwanian • 'j Santa Approves A Christmas Gift Santa Claus has been down a great chimneys since he started busi ness, and he is intimately acquainted with a large number of people. He knows that the best kinds of gifts • v: NOSE CLOGGED FROM \ t » * * A COLD OR CATARRH { i Cream in Nostrils . rr> To i Apply Up Air Passages. Open Ah! What relief! Your clogged nostrils open right up, the air passages of your head are clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffl ing, mucous" discharge, headache, dry ness—no struggling for breath at night, your cold or catarrh is gone. Don’t stay stulfed-up! Get 1 a small bottle ef Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic cream in your nos¬ trils, let it penetrate through every air passage of the head; soothe and heal the swollen, inflamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Ely’s Cream Balm is’just what been every seeking. cold and It’s catarrh just sufferer has splendid. Y Penetrates Through the Skin Clear to the Bone Liniment Called Mexican Mustang has Strange Power A lame back, a strained muscle or ach¬ ing joints will stop paining and become Um * and natural if you will apply a iitt f that old-fashioned liniment known as Mexican Mustang. Druggists and other authorities agree that its great power to relieve pain is due to its magical penetrating action—it goes through the outer layers of the skin without burning or a trace of blister, right to the sore spot. It is not like the smarting, strong, burning mixtures usually known as lini¬ ments. No matter if all other outside disap applied pfH! nted ons have with failed, Mexican you will Mustang not be i rr r, r o haaIs cuts, burns and sores and su makes a valuable remedy to have in the home at all times. All drug¬ gists and wholesalers sell Mustang Lini¬ ment or can get it for you. * f are those which please the whole family, and which bring the excite¬ ment and enjoyment of Christmas every week. That is why he looks so jolly when he receives hundreds of subscriptions to The Youth's Com p an j on with which to fill his pack. And, being wise from long experience, j, e knows that people are likely to overdo things around Christmas, so he chuckles when he sticks a Com panion into the top of a stocking. “Be as greedy as you like, ■ ’ he thinks, .. the more, the better for you. • • The 52 issues of The Youth’s Com¬ panion for 1926 will be crowded with serial stories, short stories, editorials, poetry, facts, and fun. Just send your order to the address below and Santa will take care of delivering the paper to your home or to the home of a friend. Subscribers will receive: 1. The Youth’s Companion—52 in 1926, and 2. The remaining issues of 1925. All for only $2. 3. Or include McCall’s Magazine, the monthly authority on fashions. Both publications, only S2.50. THE YOUTH’S COMPANION S N Dept., Boston, Mass. n-i5-itp. ■ t Civilization'8 Real Test The true test of civil’zation is not the census, nor the size of -cities, nor :rops; no, but the kind of man the :ountry turns out.—Emerson. M** t > w NEW PRICES ON DAIRY PRODUCTS! * * Now in Effect, Sweet Milk in pint bottle, ...................... 10c «.ck ¥ Sweet Milk in quart bottle* ................—...... 15c each 9 I* Buttermilk ............................................ 5c quart Butter at market price. > 40c pint > ;+ Terms: Cash in advance or strictly weekly. > > Braswell’s Sanitary Dairy * W. J. !• Dairy Phone 3303 Fort Valley, Ga. Pes Phono* 13! J* THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1925. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1925. IS D i Said the little red rooster. “Gosh all hemlock. things are tough. Seems that worms are getting scarcer, and 1 cannot find enough. What’s become of all those fat ones is a mystery to me. There were thousands through that rainy spell—but now where can they be?” The old blark hen. who heard him. didn’t grumble or complain. She has gone through lots of dry spells, and lived through floods and rain So she flew up on the grindstone, and she gave her claws a whet, As she said, “I’ve never seen the time there wasn’t worms to get.” She picked a new and undug spot; the earth was hard and firm. The little rooster jeered, “new ground! That’s no place for a worm!” The old black hen just spread her feet, she dug both fast and free, “I must go to the worms,” she said. “The worms won’t come to me.” The rooster vainly spent the day, through habit by the ways Where fat round worms had passed in Nquads back and forth in the rainy days. When nightfall found him supperless, he growled in accents rough, “I’m hungry as a fowl can be. Conditions sure are tough.” He turned then to the old black hen and said “It’s worse with you, For you’re not only hungry but you must he tired too. rested while watched for worms, so I feel fairly perk; Rut how are you? Without worms, too? And after all this work?” The old black hen hopped to her pereli and dropped her eyes to sleep And murmured in a drowsy tone, “Young man. hear this and weep. I’m full of worms and happy, for I’ve dined both long and well The worms are there as always—but I had to dig like—everything.” —KANSAS STATE NEWS. TOMORROW FRIDAY TWELVE O’CLOCK SHARP Be prompt. Don’t miss a minute of the meeting. That was a great hour of constructive interest and action last Friday when we DID MORE THAN MERELY TALK for the launching of a Peach County Chamber of Commerce. Let’s follow up with more constructive ACTION. { L. L. Brown, Jr., A. J. Evans and J. D. Fagan are the program committee. We can look for something good from those lively lights. And the boys will have thrilling things to tell about (he convention this week in Albany. av ' -f i / s.xvi //. c w. Pumpkin Moonshine 99 If anything save the pie it makes possible were needed to give the pumpkin fame, James Whitcomb Ri¬ ley supplied the deficiency when he penned his poem, “When the Frost is On the Pumpkin.” Now come the Connecticut Yankees with a contribution, however, that will give the pumpkin an appeal to a certain class who may never have heard of the Hoosier poet and have no taste for any kind of pie. The New Englanders are making moonshine liquor, out of pumpkins in a manner so simple that he who grows pumpkins may drink, even if all the distillers should be jailed and the aquatic rum runners chased to the other side of the sea. All that is necessary to produce the new form of intoxicant is to fill the pumpkin with sugar and let it alone for twenty-one days, by which time the contents will have been converted into alcohol. That the drink has a “kick” suffi¬ cient to meet the requirements of the most exacting toper is proven by the jag of a herd of cows that discovered half a dozen pumpkins which had been appropriately doctored by a thirtsy New Englander. It looks as if Dame Nature herself i had entered into the conspiracy The Fort Valley Oil Co. Manufacturers of COTTON SEED PRODUCTS FORT VALLEY, GA. I). C. STROTHER & K. M. WHITING, KIWANIANS GREEN-MILLER COMPANY m i Radios 9 Batteries and Tubes GREEN-MILLER COMPANY ULENMORK GREEN, KIW ANIAN Georgia Agricultural Works QUALITY SERVICE HARDWARE & FURNITURE it We’ve Got It o mi F. O. MILLER, Kiwanian GALLAHER-HALE GRO. CO. mg Distributors Purina Feeds 4. Feed from the Checkerboard Bag '5 WHOLESALE GROCERS R. D. HALE, KIWANIAN C HALL KIWANIAN THE TIRE MAN m % m V.' A iF frokyT WjC. against the eighteenth amendment and Andrew Volstead. It may be that in time farmers in these sections, where both pumpkins and sugar cane flourish, will simplify matters by growing the cane and the pumpkins in the same field. If so, we may expect a land boom in those sections that will cause real estate promoters to withdraw from Florida and lead the rush for the land of pumpkin moonshine. However, if this should come to pass, it may be necessary to extermi nate the rabbits and other small ani ma i s that thrive in sections where the pumpkin moonshine is made, as they might become as blood-thirsty as a w. TAX COLLECTOR’S NOTICE I will lie at the following places on the dates named for the purpose of collecting State and County taxes for 1925. Ft. Valley, Thursday, Nov J 2 lit all day. Myrtle, Friday, Nov. 13th, A. M. Powersville, Friday, Nov. 13tli, P. M. Claude, Saturday, Nov. 14 th, A. M. Byron, Saturday, Nov. 14 th, P. M. Fort Valley, Thursday, Nov. 19th, all day. Tax payers will please bear in mind the necessity of registering on the Voters’ Book to complete the registration list for Peach County. Very truly yours, w T. E. THARPE, T. C. Nov. 3rd, 1923. i-r y v- fcrrr.l J’W*T I '"fPTV VI t To Be Won A city’s trade territory must now bee won. No longer is it true that inconven¬ iences of transportation compel a trade territory to stick to one particu¬ lar city. The average person, due to good roads and to automobiles, now has a choice as to where he shall trade. Yet many a merchant is going along a well worn rut deluding himself with the jdea that a trade territory is a j fixture, that the years to come will j human tiger and a menace to the race. -Fayetteville (Tenn.) Observer. Number 10. bring him the same trade as the years of the past. In nearby cities other merchants have sensed the change, have awaken¬ ed to the keeness of the present com petition and are actively going out after new business and actively seek¬ ing to retain old business. —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— trvUe , | i ij-'A I; ■■ l‘ 9 * I \TL i r i, V fi. liiii i l . I i ; / \ i .« OPTICAL ART CO. OCULIST AND ) J OPTICIAN 0 h [C] I Perfect Fifth Service Floor Eye 1 Citizens and Southern Bank Bldg. MACON GA. Professional Directory Claude M. Houser Samuel M. Mathews HOUSER & MATHEWS ATTORNEYS AT LAW Practice in all the State and Federal Courts Loans made upon City Property on monthly payment plan and regular loans upon farm property. Woolfolk Bldg. Phone 10Tj Port Valley, Ga. C. L. SHEPARI) ATTORNEY AT LAW Woolfolk Building Phone 31 Fort Valley, Ga. Practice in all the State and Federal Courts Loans Made on Realty Louis L. Brown Louis I,. Brown, Jr. BROWN & BROWN ATTORNEYS AT LAW Wright Building. Phone 9 Fort Valley, Ga. Practice in all the State and Federal Courts Loans on Realty Negotiated GEO. B. CULPEPPER, JR. ATTORNEY AT LAW Citizens Bank Building Phone 374 Fort Valley, Ga. DR. W. L. NANCE DENTIST Miss Florence Taylor, Assistant Citizens Bank Building Fort Valley, Ga. Phones: Office 82; Residence 115. DR. W. H. H \ f ER DENTIST Office over Copelarui's Pharmacy. Fort Valley. Ga. ’PHONES Residence 50-J. Office 14-J. We Insure Everything Insurable KENDRICK INSURANCE AGENCY Woolfolk Fort Valley Phone Bldg. Ga. 58-J. JOHN T. SLATON INSURANCE AGENCY FIRE, TORNADO & AUTOMOBILE Prompt and Satisfactory Service Guaranteed Woolfolk Bldg. - Phone 283. ROLAND A. HILEY Real Estate and Renting Agent Let me collect your House Rents Good roads and automobiles have ushered in a new era. With this new era comes the neces¬ sity for new methods, for more adver¬ tising, for competition with many times as many stores, for sales poli¬ cies as modern as any in a wide range of territory, etc. Formerly a trade territory was shackled to a city. Today the city must win its trade territory.—Blackshear Times.