Newspaper Page Text
BYRON NEWS ITEMS
By R. L. DUKE
(lnt.nSrS for l».l wmV. p»p*rl
Misses Gertrude Peavy and Sara
Lowe arrived home Saturday to spend
fh« holidays with home folks.
• * *
Miss Bertha Walton of Macon is
spending several days with friends in
Byron.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur White and lit¬
tle daughter of Montgomery, Alaba
mi, are spending several days with
home folks.
* * *
Mr. Frank Holland is at home for
the holidays.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ackley of
Hartford, Conn., are visiting Mr. and
Mrs. H. J. Peavy.
• * *
Col. and Mrs. A. M. Lamar and
family of West Palm Beach, Florida,
are spending Christmas holidays with
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Peavy, Sr.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Peavy, Jr.,
left Tuesday for Ellaville where they
will spend a few days with Mrs.
Peavy’s parents.
• • •
Miss Willie Mae Joyner is visit
ing her sister, Mrs. W. IJ. Aultman, in
Atlanta.
» * *
Mrs. K. L. Kay left Tuesday to
spend the Christmas holidays with her
daughter, Mrs. R. H. Mosely, of Bir
mingham, Alabama.
* * *
Miss Robbis Adair is spending the
Christmas holidays with her sister,
Mr*. J. B. Kay.
• *
Quintine Gassett of Georgia Tech is
spending the holidays with his pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Gassett.
* * *
Messers. Joe and Millard Mosley of
Emory are spending a few days at
home.
• * *
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hammock of
Culloden are spending the Christmas
holidays with Mr. and Mrs. N. A.
Bu*h.
* * *
Mi*s Genie. Wells left Saturday to
spend a few days at 3 albotton with
home folks.
* » *
Miss Flora Rogers is visiting home
folks in Perry.
♦ * *
Miss Ada Wheeler is spending the
holidays with her parents in h ort \ al
i«y.
* * *
Miss Ethel Kay left I' riday for
Venice, Florida, to spend a few days
with her parents,
* * *
Miss Dorothy Holland of Bessie
Tift is spending the holidays with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Holland.
• * *
We are glad to see Miss Jessie Wal¬
ton, assistant postmaster, back on the
job after being confined to her bed for
several days with a severe cold.
• * *
Mr. H. M. Davis and family mo¬
tored to Clopine Sunday.
• * *
Miss Maxie Gilmore spent Wednes¬
day in Macon with Mrs. J. H. Chason.
* * •
Mr. J. H. Gordon is spending a few
days with home folks in Byron.
Bayer Aspirin
Proved Safe
Take without Fear as Told
in “Bayer” Package
%
BAVER
the
Unless you sec the “Bayer Cross" on
package ting the or genuine on tablets Bayer you Aspirin are not proved get¬
safe by millions and prescribed by
• physicians over twenty-five year*
Colds Headache
Neuritis Lumbago
Toothache Rheumatism
v "euralgia Pain, Pain
.Altnbroken LA* “Bayer” package con
k an S directions. Handy boxes
e sts cost few cents. Drug
r - ip fell bottles of !4 and 100.
/ ' ? Of *ej
.
I.
Miss Annie Ruth Wasden of Ma
con is spending a few days with Miss
Dora Poo , e
» » •
Mrs. A. I). Kelly and little son of
Albany are spending a few days with
! her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. I •
I )orsett.
• » *
Mr. W. E. Connell of Perry spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Duke.
* * •
Mr. Clyde McKnight spent Sunday
in Fort Valley with friends.
• * *
Mrs. J. W. Mills spent Wednesday
in Macon.
• * •
Here’s wishing each and every one,
Health, Happiness and Prosperity all
through Christmas and the coming
year.
Largest Business in the
History Central Hailway
-- 1
Declaring that the patronage and
good will of the traveling and ship
ping public toward the Central of
Georgia Railway has been evidenced
by the largest business in the history
0 f the railroad in 1925, President L.
^ a Downs, speaking in behalf of the
employes of the road, expresses deep
t appreciation.
President Downs states that the
| prospects for continued good business
• an( j f or general prosperity were never
brighter. lie says the development
of the Southeast has attracted the at
tention of the entire country, that the
! growth of textiles, the development of
! clay the diversification of
resources,
farm products, etc. all point to prog
ress a i f ,ng both industrial and agri
cultural lines. He says there is every
indication that the Southeast is just
entering upon a period of growth and
expansion that promises to make 1926
a record year of progress.
The Central of Georgia is adding
(new equipment and improving all of
; Tacilities in order that it may keep
pace with the expansion of business,
The co-operation and support of
the public encourage the employes
I and management of the Centra! in
^eir plans and efforts for improved
serv j cei says the President.
-
ALL OUT OF SORTS?
<. () \\. lM This Good Woman Who Tells
Her Experience.
All too often women accept their
pains and aches as natural to their
gpx They fail to reealize that weak
kidneys are often to blame for that
backache, those headaches, dizzy
gpe j| g and that tired, depressed feel
j nK . Thousands have found new
( health and strength by helping the
weakened kidneys with Doan’s
a stimulant diuretic. This case is one
of many in this locality,
Mrs. J. H Jones, 555 Arch St., Ma
(con, Ga., says: T had kidney trouble
and sharp, shooting pains in my back
very often. My back was stiff and it
! was hard for me to straighten up, es
i pedally after sitting. Headaches were
' common and often followed by dizzy
spelis. My head seemed to swim and
things in the room whirled around. Af¬
ter the doctor had failed to help me,
11 was advised to use Doan’s Pills. A
few boxes rid me of all symptoms. **
I 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
i Co., Mfrs., Buffalo) N. Y. Adv.
OWN YOUR HOME
If you own your lot we will build for you and let you pay for same
like rent, or we will buy your lot and build home and sell to you on
terms of one-fourth cash, balance like rent.
WHY PAY RENT?
Write or phone us for appointment.
W. J. HAMLIN
General Contractor
504 Mulberry St. Macon, Ga.
Office Phone 4196 Residence 4565-W
• • • * NEW PRICES ON Dir PRODUCTS!
.
Now in Effect.
■ >
« > Sweet Milk in pint bottles ......... _____ 10c each
' • Sweet Milk in quart bottles ........ ....... 15c each
Buttermilk .................. 5c quart
i, Butter at market price.
Cream......................... _______ 40c pint
■
< • Terms: Cash in advance strictly weekly.
or <
>
, ■ W. J. Braswell’s Sanitary Dairy ■
'' 131
J Dairy Phone 3303 Fort Valley, Ga. Res. Phone •
,
, .
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1925.
WHAT THE SAGES HAVE SAID
ABOUT KINDNESS
Life is made up, not of great sac¬
rifices or duties, but of little things,
in which smiles, the kindnesses, and
small obligations, given habitually, are
wba ^ you w j n an( j preserve the heart
unc j secure comfort .—Sir H. Davy.
Kindness is the golden chain by
which society is bound
Goethe.
The drying up a sinfiic tear, has
more of honest fame, than shedding
seas of gore.—Byron,
Kindness in women, not their beau¬
teous looks, shall win my love.—
Shakespeare.
I expect to pass through life but
once.—If therefore, there he any kind¬
ness I can show, or any good thing I
ean do to any fellow-being, let me do
it now, not defer or neglect it, as I
shall not pass this way again.—Penn.
Kind looks, kind words, kind acts,
and warm handshakes—these are sec
ondary means of grace when men are
in trouble and are fighting with un
seen battles.—John Hall,
The best portion of a good man’s
life is his little, nameless, unremem
bered acts of kindness and love.—
Wordsworth.
A kind heart is a fountain of glad
ness, making everything in its vicin
ity freshen into smiles.—Washington
Irving.
It is good for us to think no grace
or blessing truly ours till we are
aware that God has blessed some one
else with it through us—Philip
Brooks.
Kindness is a language the dumb
can speak, and the deaf can hear and
understand.—Bovee.
The true and noble way to kill a
foe, is not to kill him; you, with
ness, may so change him that he shall
cease to be a foe, and then he’s slain.
—Aleyn.
He hath a tear for pity, and a hand
| open as day for melting
Shakespeare.
| You may find people without ready the
to do the Samaritan
and two-pence.—Sydney Smith,
Paradise is open to all kind
:
—Beranger.
Kind words produce their own
in men’s souls; and a beautiful
it is. They soothe and quiet and
fort the hearer. They shame him
of his sour, morose, unkind
We have not yet begun to use
words in such abundance as
ought to be used.—Pascal,
Each one of us is bound to make
little circle in which he lives
and happier. Bound to see that out
that small circle the widest good
flow. Each may have fixed in
mind the thought that out of a
gle house-hold may flow
that shall stimulate the whole
monwealth and the whole
world.—A. P. Stanley.
Kindness in ourselves is the
that blunts the sting of
in another.—Landor.
An effort made for the happiness
others lifts above ourselves.—L.
Child.
Ask thyself, daily, to how many
minded persons tho hast shown a
disposition.—Marcus Antoninus.
When death, the great
has come, h is never our
that we repent of, but our
Georgie Eliot.
Kindness is the only charm
ted to the aged; it is the coquetry of
white hair,—Feuillet.
Sow good services; sweet remem¬
brances will grow from them.—Madde
Stael.
To cultivate kindness Is a valuable
part of the business life.—Johnson.
He who confers a favor should at
once forget it, if he is not to show a
sordid, ungenerous spirit. To remind
a man of a kindness conferred on him,
and to talk of it, is little different
from reproach.—Demosthenes.
/ had rather never receive a kind
ness than never to bestow one.—Not
to return a benefit is the greater sin,
but not to confer it, is the earlier.
Seneca,
The one who will be found in trial
capable of great acts of love is ever
the one who is always doing consid
erable small ones.—F. W. r Robertson.
Kind words prevent a great deal of
that preverseness which rough and
imperious usage often produces in
general minds. Locke.
The happiness of life may be great
ly increased by small courtesies in
which there is no parade, whose voice
I it too still to tease, and which mani
fest themselves by tender and affec
J tionate looks, and little kind acts °f
attention.—Sterne.
i What we do for ours while we have
them, will be precisely what will ren
j der their memory sweet to the heart
when we no longer have them.—F.
Godet.
Kind hearts are more than coronets,
and simple faith than Norman blood.
—Tennyson.
Win hearts, and you have all mens
hands and purses.—Burleigh.
A word of kindness is seldom spok
en in vain, while w ty saying are as
easily lost as the pi rl: flipping from
a broken string.—G. D. Prentice.
I have sped much by l.:nj and sea
and mingled with much people, but
never yet could find a spot unsunned
by human kindness.—Tupper.
What do we live for, if it is not to
make life less difficult to each other.
—George Eliot.
The cheapest of all things is kind
ness, its exercise requiring the least
possible trouble and self-sacrifice.—
Smiles.
In the intercourse of social life, it is
by little acts of watchful kindness re¬
curring daily and hourly, by words,
tones, gestures, looks, that affection
is won and preserved.—Sala.
_
PEACH POULTRY CO.
Poultry and Stock Feeds
Poultry Equipment and Remedies
Personal Consultation Free
HATCHERY
dealers Atoll is Black durable For Pencil a — soft ask that for \
x, VELVET
% m Write for trial sample
x American Lead Pencil Co.
s 220 Fifth Ave., New York
■01mT3, 85 \ \ Makers VENUS of PENCILS 9 the famous
YELVET
t?fe Friendly Hotel
Invites you to
cAtlanta
RATES: A Circulating i c e
One Person water and ceil¬
S2.5D, $3.00 ing tans in every
room.
$3.50. $4.00 I I
$5.00 : V :
- alf A'lanta's ..ewes t
Two Persons It* and finest hotel.
I&sct & S \
$4.50, $5.00 v ft £ O H B
$6.00, $7.00 U CK f kJ Magnificent
d d a p -
IP •t rt I .. pcintments.
The best place in P
Atlanta to eat. k*- Special
5 dining . for arrange¬
rooms ments hand¬
■ and al fresco ter¬ ling automobile
race. parties. Garage.
.
The HENRY GRADY Hotel
550 Rooms—550 Baths
Corner Peachtree and Cain Ctrcets
JAMES r. dcJAr.NETTS, V.-P. * Mgr. TKCS. 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, JTsnsger
Beautitudes of Conservation
Beautitudes of Conservation read at the
Woman’s Club by Mrs. A. M. Solomon,
chairman of the Civic department, as a
reminder of work for Arbor Day, which
was Friday, Dec. 4th.
1. Blessed are they who plant
long-lived tree and shrub, for
tions shall rise up and call
blessed.
2. Blessed are they who are
ers of flower gardens, for in the
of a flower may be seen its
3. Blessed are they who
nature’s gifts, for they shall be
as lovers of beauty.
4. , Blessed are they who , clear ,
j the highways, byways and
grounds, for cleanliness is next
i j godliness.
! 5. Blessed are they who
land freshen their buildings and
with Paint, f° r improvement and
P raise of many people shall be
reward.
6. Blessed are they who war
' signs and banish the billboards
the rural highways, for they
be called protectors of roadside
j ty and landscape scenery,
Blegsed are they who
1 against friend apd relative in
P roteetion of nature’s gifts to
nation, for they shall be
as true patriots of America.
8. Blessed are the towns with
ning boards, for great beauty,
tions as follows: What I Made
From this Year: Health and
tion on the Farm; Killing Hogs
Curing Meat on the Farm;
Poultry and Grading Eggs for
Market; Marketing of Vegetables
Other Farm Products, and many
important topics,
Paper: Improvement and
ges in My Community — Club
What I Have Done to Help
My Community — presidents of
munity clubs and club members,
Debate: Resolved: That the Cow
More Beneficial to the Farmer
j the Hen.
Prizes as follows: $ 20.00.
$10.00, and $5.00 will be awarded
the best community club exhibits.
club members will receive prizes
best display of butter, meat and
i try.
Two big days of instruction and
I formation,
j
1
TENTH ANNUAL HOME CURED
MEAT AND POULTRY SHOW
Farmers’ Demonstration Mass Meet¬
ing, Educational Rally and Free
Barbecue Will Be Held.
On Thursday and Friday March 4th
and 5th, at the Fort Valley H. & I.
School, Fort Valley, Ga., under the
i auspices of the extension division of
I the U. S. department of Agriculture,
State College, Athens, co-operation
and the Department of Education, the
lot n annual home cured meat anil
poultry show will be held.
1 The community clubs and club mem¬
bers are planning to make this show
and meeting the biggest and best ever
held in the county. The exhibits will
consigt of 500 fjne hickory smoked
hamg and gjdeg; }Q0 )bg fancy butter;
J0(J e breed c hj c kens and a fine
display of handicraft and fancy work
from the schools.
There will be lectures and demon
gtrationg an(] reports by presidents of
community clubs and club members,
editorg of m , wspapers , lawyers, bank
erg ^ educators and Government ex
pertg
f g ome 0 f the speakers: Dr. Geo. W.
Carver, noted scientist and chemist
, wbo bag de ve lo P ed over 100 products
from the sweet potato, over 150 uses
from the peanut and upwards of
articles of value from the pecan; also
bag extra cted wonderful dyes from
the clays of the Southern soils, has
promised to be present and
and give a demons tration. Also Col.
A N un n, Perry, Mr. C. E.
vice prea j dent G f Citizens Bank
Fort Valley, Mr. Walter B. Hill,
pervisor Rural schools of Ga., Dr.
G G Rj c h a rdson, Athens,
q wiley, president Georgia
and Industrial College,
Professor P. H. Stome, state
for negro workers, Savannah, H.
jj unt pr incipal Fort Valley H. &
j school, Professor Ralph
county school superintendent,
; others.
Reports, lectures and
How Doctors Treat
Colds and the Fit)
To break up a cold overnight or
to cut short an attack of grippe, in
fluer.zn, sore throat or tonsillitis,
sicians and druggists the are purified now
mending Calotabs, tablet
refined calomel c impound calomel
gives you the effects of
salts combined, without the
ant effects of either.
One or t.io Calof.abs at
with a swallow of water, that’s all
No salts, no r.ausca nor the
interference with your eating,
or pleasure. Next morning your is
has vanished, your system
oughly purified and you are fee
fine with a he- rty appetite tor break
fast Eat what you please,—-no dan
per. Get family pack
a ago, At
full directions, only o5 cents. sn
drug store.
COME v.1
£> • -
$(§z Where get combined m
you can ser
im \ ices of Oculist and Optician for your
S”
eyes’ SAKE!
Optical Art Co. (
SJ-. 515-16-17 CITIZENS & SOUTHERN BANK BUILDING.? ^
I |§)L v ^ ■
MACON GEORGIA
Tjsri r
f
Ilf il CISC) :
fe t ill DijufSI t«sH kM ii:
c a mm
IS!?** . Ii p i
n
Mi CC ? I * A
I* m I!
re 1
A SHIP iHF
(100*1865 ft
w|H<:
=C
READY ROOFINGS
T hat Carey roofing gives the service <$
and weight of the goods considered, expected of it, cost
is a well-known fact
proved by the experience of thousands of satisfied users.
Let us assist you in selecting the roofing to meet your require
ments. Samples and prices gladly given. ■f
u A Roof for Every Building o il
FORT VALLEY LUMBER COMPANY ^
Fort Valley , Georgiy j
■
perity and peace shall descend upon^
them.
9. Great shall be the reward of
those who protect our forests from
fire, for the bird shall continue to
serve him and the fish and wild ani
mal to furnish him food,
10. Whosoever conservet *rna :
tional resources serveth h^ J ana
the generations following,
« Gothic At. •n
Tlie term Gothic was originally np
plied by the Italians to the pointed
| architecture which preceded the Re-
1 nalsssnce, because tbe Italian artist*
i regarded , the style worthy nT omy ,i.
, new as
of the barb:','i.' Gottis. The erroneous
j j f j f . a that the style was Germanic Gothic be¬
came prevalent and the term
was generally ndoptpd.
m Soon Felt
c
?!i f|| t! Improvement j
i "The first time I took
II ili Cardui 1 was in an awful bad
way,” says Mrs. OraCarlile,
R. F. D. 5, Troup, Texas,
I-1 I "I heavy v/ent storm fishing came one up dtyfj a\^P
k,l it| got soaking wet in the r^i-..
I was afflicted with awful
1 I smothering spells.
‘‘My mother had some
CARDUI
1 For Female Troubles
1 she
| in the house that was 1 I
jS taking, so she immediately
began giving it to me. In vjg
ji !I few ‘‘Last days tall 1 got I got all right. run-dowtf'j. #y
jS in health. and I 1 began was weak to suffer. and HI Bj
a puny 1 would get I could hardly I;
1 so ||
walk. Having taken Cardui
<1 ill before, 1 sent to the store from for 1 g
.§j a bottle of it. Almost 1
the first dose I could feel an QH
IS iji improvement. helped
“Cardui has me
lot and 1 am glad to recom
|a if mend it. 1 don’t 1 feel lik last
ii the same woman was
:| fall. My appetite it’s is Cardui good
jl now, and I’m sure
that’s made it pick up." tl
ii All Druggists’ EX-n: