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Salvation I* Serve Our
Army Girl ,
. Boys
1 : i\ L (
/ • i"\ TOTHING stimulates the'
spirit of our boys “over
there” after a hard day’s drive
like the doughnuts and coffee
serve d right behind the lines
by the Salvation Army.
\ |W® can help serve hot coffee and dough- Ifif
i , nuts to our boils; vVe can cheer and comfort ! , ! Msn
them by giving GENEROUSLY to the |
United War-Work Campaign j||||
SWEETS are of tremendous food like their sweets in coffee, some in StSill JJ2
value, craved by everyone. That tea and some m S™lS!*"s?sh
is why they arc supplied to our sol-
*- > >
Heard’s
Store Specials
| e EndeyrsgmenlJj
The large number of our customers
who bring their friends here to buy shoes is a
significant endorsement that is worthy of com
ment. We are winning new customers every
day simply by pleasing our old ones.
Honest Shoe
Values
Every shoe we sell is carefully fash
ioned of the best materials. The many little
quality features that distinguish the really well
made shoes from the ordinary kind will be
found throughout our line of men’s, women’s
and children’s shoes.
stock is large and our prices small
G. W. HEARD
News and Journal 1.25.
PROFESSIONAL CARD
DR. J. L. HARRISON
Dentist
301-302 Jackson Building
Gainesville, Ga.
W. W. PIRKLE, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon.
Cumming, - Georgia.
Office at Residence. Phone 88.
O. W. SETTLE
Funeral Director & Embalmer
Norcross, Ga.
Day and Night ’Phone.
DR. M. F. KELLEY, Dentist,
Cumming, Ga.
Office over F. & M. Bank.
All Work Guaranteed
Lawrenceville Auto Exchange
P. C. Fowler, Manager,
Lawrencevile, Ga
Autos bought, sold, Exchanged
Give us a Call
LAND SALE.
Will be sold at the late resi
dence of Mrs. Delilah Tumlin,
deceased, on the 22nd day of
November, 1918, at 10 o’clock,
a. m. the following lands belong
ing to the estate of said deceas
ed to wit: 23 acres, more or less
off of lot of land number (>56,
being all of said lot excep; 17
acres of northeast corner of the
said lot, lying and being in the
14th district and Ist section of
Porsyth county, Georgia. Sold
for distribution among the heirs
at law of said deceased. Terms
ifsale, cash. Deeds made to pur
ihaser by the heirs. Sold by a
greemcnt of the heirs of said es
ate. This Oct. 21st, 1918.
W. A. Tumlin, Agenl
for heirs at law of Mrs. Delilah
Tumlin, deceased.
For Sale.
One Overland car, 85, model
1918, practically new. Call on
Henry Gilbert, Cumming, Ga.,
route 3.
CIN NOTICE.
After Saturday, the 2nd of
November, we will gin only on
Monday, Wednesday and Fri
day of each week.
Hooper Gin fz Seed Cos.
Derr father and mother: I will
write you h few lines tonight
to let you know that I am well,
and I hope you all are the same
I am having a fine time. I have
a nice place to stay and plenty
to eat. This sure is a fine coun
try hut we can’t buy anything
much here, and we can’t get a
ny stationery except when we
find a V M C A. That is why 1
have not wrote any more than
I have. I sure am crazy to hear
from home and I want you to
write me a long letter and tell
me all the news. 1 don’t think
it will be very long before I’ll
come bac khome, so don’t wor
ry for I am satisfied and having
a good time. I am going to try
to write every week but if I
should fail sometimes don’t you
think that there is anything
wrong. If any one around home
wants to write to me give them
my address and tell them that I
can’t write very many letters
myself but would like to hear
from them all. Well, there isn’t
anything else to write so I will
close for this time, hoping you
are all well. Your son,
Tom Andrews.
Dear father and mother: I will
write you all a few' lines which
leaves me - well and hope this
will reach you the same. I have
not got any mail from you all
yet, but I don’t suppose it is
your fault. Some of the boys
have heard from home that
come over v/ith me. I sure
w'ould like to get a letter from
home and to hear how every
body is getting along. Write to
me and tell me how everything
is going around home. I suppose
you are busy picking cotton
and gathering the other crops.
I sure would like to be there
helping you all and to sit a
round the fires at night, but I
can’t be there yet awhile. I do
hope that it wont be long until
we will all get to come home
to stay. Has any of the boys I
knew had to go to the camps
yet? What does Paul have to
say about going to the camps?
Joe, you must do a good days
work every day, be sure to keep
plenty of wood chopped and not
talk to Dora all the time. Lois,
you be a good little girl until
I come back. Hope you and An
nie do the same. How many
bales of cotton have you all got
out and how many do you think
you will get? Has Toy got a
good crop this year? How is
David and Hannah getting a
long? Have they got a good
crop? Have you all made your
arrangements for another year
When has Mack and Tom been
home? What kind of a crop
have they got? Tell Paul Bagly
he don’t know what a good time
is unless he was over here in a
French training camp. I am get
ting plenty to eat and every
thing is cooked all right. I have
not had those pictures made
yet that I promised to and I’ve
not got those that you were to
send. When writing tell me all
the news. Will close for this
time. Answer soon. From,
JasPaul Vaughan
BEAVER RUIN.
After an absence of sometime
will write again.
Rev Mangum filled his regu
lar appointment here Saurday
and Sunday.
Mr J G Hammond and fam
ily and Mr Harrison Phagan.
wife and little daughter of
South Georgia are visiting rela
iives here.
Mr and Mrs Paul Barnes vis
ted Mr and Mrs II E Shadburn
km day.
Wc are sorry to say Mrs F ran
•is Mullinax is seriously ill but
sope for her a speedy recovery
Mrs Addie Burns and son,
Howard, is visiting her mother,
Mrs W M Tate who is seriously
sick, but hope 3he will loon he
>ut again .
Mr J L Johnson spent the
week end with his daughter,
Mrs C O Wheeler.
Mr Harris Bruce of Fitzger
ald is visiting his mother and
other relatives here.
Rev Brown of Cumming will
preach at this place next 3rd
Sunday at 2:30. Everybody re
member this and come out and
hear him. Hazel.
fgi“Heah’s Yo’ r^,
Luzianne,
jj^^^Cq'neV’
A POT of steaming, stimulating
Luzianne Coffee set before "a V \
gentleman and a judge of fine coffee.” \\//z „ \ '
A finer hot beverage than good, old ' r ~
Luzianne never existed. >j I 1 7 1 X fa We
Luzianne tastes all the way down \ gg 1
and you say “Set ’em up again.” f-
Buy a can of Luzianne Coffee. If
you can’t honestly say that it’s the
best cup of coffee that ever passed * *
your lips, tell your grocer you’re not
satisfied and he’ll give you back your g m mi qgy
money on the spot.
Please try Luzianne. You’ll liko
it, you will. In clean, air-tight tins. " Whan It
tsjzu^m
COFFEE )
No Mystery
in Meat
Some things are so simple
that they have to be explained
again and again. When things
are obvious, people keep looking
for mysteries behind them.
So it is with the packing bus
iness, The mere size of Swift
& Company confuses many.
Because their imaginations are
not geared up to scale, they be
lieve there must be magic in it
somewhere -some weird power.
Swift & Company is just like any
other manufacturing business run by
human beings like yourself; it takes in
raw material on the one hand and turns
out a finished product on the other.
Swift & Company keeps down the
“spread,” or the expense absorbed be
tween raw and finished material, to as
low a figure as possible. (If it didn’t
it would be put out of business by
others who do.)
How much Swift & Company pays
for the raw material, and how much
it gets for the finished product, depends
upon conditions which Swift &
Company does not control.
It depends entirely upon how much
people want the finished product, and
how much raw material there is avail
able to make it from.
The profits of Swift & Company
amount to less than one cent per pound
on all meats and by-products—less than
one-fourth of a cent on beef.
Keep Your Pledge
j£l Hi Make Good for Our
U & M Fighting Men
buy WAR - SAVINGS
STAMPS
Swift & Company, U.S.A.
Catarrh (or Twenty Years
Mrs. M. S. Davis, 1607
10th Ave., N. Na-shviile,
Tenn., writes:
bavin# been a constant
cuffci>r frotn cntnrrh for more
th£t# fvtfiM* year* and after try
in# almost every remedy adver
tised, and havkig? lott sil hope. I
vfery reluctantly began the use
of Pea-tinu abbut two yea; s ago.
Everybody sayt I look yonr*r
uow than I 6f<l twenty yrara iiro,
and i actually fecJ younger and
bett4*iv arid %+tfeh more. I am
recommending it to my iieirrh
bor aaid all witbr whom 1 come
in contact."
Sold Everywhere
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