Newspaper Page Text
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“Dress-Up Week”
WOOLTEX tailored garments lead
the fashions. And the leaders of
all the beautiful Wooltex coats are these
Exclusive Pompadour coats
““Exclusive’ 1s a frequently misused word.
Not so here. When we say Wooltex Pompa
dour Coats are Absolutely Exclusive, we can
show you why.
Only one woolen mill makes Pompadour cloth.:
Every yard of that cloth goes to the Wooltex tailors.
Unless the=Wooltex label is in the coat, it cannot be a
Pompadour cloth coat
Pompadour cloth is woven by a special process from'
the finest wools. It is comfortable in weight and very
warm. Tailored as only Wooltex coats are tailored, these
Pompadour coats are remarkably stylish and beautiful.
- The six coats illustrated here are
\ Pompadour coats—the style leaders
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Pompadour Coat 2054
A very dressy new model with
fur collar and novel belt effects.
Beautifully graceful, stylish
model in exclusive Pompadour
cloth, Choicest colors,
McCarty, Johnstone Co.
The Store That Sells Wooltex %
Bankruptcy Act
Abused States
Judge Lambdin
Macon, Georgia October 6.
(Special.)—Judge W. W, Lamb
din came here and opened the
Xnited States court. It was his
“first appearance on the bench in
‘this city and a big crowd of
lawyers was on hand to greet
him.
Judge Lambdin’s charge to the
grand jury, in which he warned
“the jurors to be on the lookout
ifor ‘fraudulent concealment of
~assets of bankrupts, was the
feature of the opening of the
«court.
In the course of his charge, the
judge referred to the awful cata
<lysm now in progress in Europe
and expressed the hope that the
final outcome will be a return to
~democratic rule and true Chris
«tainity, He declared that this
You will see every correct style tendency
of the season in these coats—natural-figure
lines that are so graceful and pleasing, the
modish flare, high collars of cloth or fur,
belted effects.
You will be delighted with the range of
plain colors and the color combinations, as
well as the variety of models.
There are subdued browns, blues and
black; there are brighter colors, all so refined
as to meet the approval of your good taste.
Every Pompadour coat—like every other™
coat that bears the Wooltex label—is tai
lored on Wooltex honor. See them all.
‘The assortment is complete. There is
a Wooltex coat that will justysuit you. |
Wooltex Coats at $16.50 to $5O
Suits at $25 to $5O .
Skirts at $5 to $l5
government occupied a position
of peculiar responsibility in tke
crisis as the upholder of the high
est ideals of civic righteousness
and international justice.
Leaving the war in Europe,
Judge Kambdin said: ‘‘l desire
to call your special attention to
offenses against the national
bankruptey act, which was adopt
ed in 1898. This was intended
to secure an-equal distribution of
the assets of an insolvent person
among his creditors.
“It so happens that this law
has been somewhat abused in the
practice, and that therefore there
is danger of it falling into re
proach among our people, I
therefore call your attention to
the fact that the provisions of
this law make it a crime fora
bankrupt to conceal from his
trustee any of the property be
longing to his estate in bank
lruptcy. or to make a false oath
in any of his bankruptey pro
ceedings.”” He also referred tol
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE, MONDAY, OCT. 11. 1915
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Pompadour Coat 2041
Another exclusive Wool
tex coat of dressy design
and beautiful lines. Note
the high rolling velvet collar
and double breasted front,
the wide belt across back.
Senator Hoke Smith
in the Capitol
Atlanta, October 9.—United
States Senator Hoke Smith, who
came to Atlanta to deliver an ad
dress in connection with the pro
ject to see whether the}Chatta
hoochee can be made navigable,
is going to remain for about a
month in Atlanta, probably until
the winter session of the senate
in Washington,
Senator Smith is staying while
in Atlanta at the home of his
daughter Mrs. Ronald Ransom.
He will give a good deal of his
time while here to the study of
the British contraband situation
as it relates to cotton shipments.
Get a hay press from Martinf
Dorminey Mfg. Co., Fitzgerald-
Ga. 113 t
§
other possible violations of this
law, - declaring jurors should
watch for violations,
A CRUSH OF WORLDS.
#lew Our Solar System May End amd
a New One Be Born. |
The whole of the present soiar sys
tem is ultimately to fall inte thre sun,
eausing an explosion that may resuit
tn a new solar system. Swueh is the
theory pmt forward by Prefessor Phitlp
Fauth, a well known astrenmomer,
whose Teputation has rested prinefpatly
upon his researches into the conditions .
on the moon. !
The novel feature of Dr. Fauth's the
ory is that tt is based upon the suppo
sition that a great part of the known
solar system, including especially the
planets Jupiter, Uranus and Saturn, are
not composed of mineral matter at all,
but are tremendous masses of ice or
balls of ice sarrounding a mineral ker- |
nel. Furthermore, he declares, a part
of what is now known as the Milky
way is not mineral or gaseous, but "a
ring of jce dust,” masses of particles
of fee suspended in space, the other
planets receiving a constant addlttonj
to their ice mass from this source.
Professor Fauth declares that the
world already at some remote periods
has had a simllar experience, resulting
in the death of nearly all animate na
ture, and that all species of life as we
know it have arisen since then. Even
tually the planets swinging through
their narrow orbits will fall into the
sun, causing a new explosion and per
haps the birth of a new solar system,
but for thousands of years before that
time, all life, either on earth or else
where, will have disappeared.—Kansas
City Journal.
e e e e e
ACROSS THE PACIFIC.
Influence of the “Great Circle” on the
Journey to Manila.
If you wanted to go from the Pana
ma canal to Yokohama which of these
two would be the shorter route? First,
across the ocean to Hawail and from
thére to Yokohama, or, second, up
along the coast to San Francisco and
then directly across the Pacific to Asia?
Nearly everybody would answer in
favor of the Hawaiian route. But the
navigators tell us the journey is 266.
miles shorter by way of San Francisco.
The “great circle” does it. Its influ
ence on distance sends ships from San
Francisco to Manila by way of the
Aleutian islands. Actually our vessels
would go much farther north than they
do but for the discouragement of the
United States hydrographic bureau at
Washington, which advises a central
route, more than 200 miles longer than
the great circle, in order to escape the
fogs and ice of the far north.
The Hawaillan Islands are frequently |
described as “the crossroads of the Pa
cific.” Their people are naturally look
ing forward to wonderful commercial
development. They will doubtless en
joy substantial progress as a commer
cial center because many conditions in
ocean currents and in prevailing winds
and in fuel costs favor Honolulu as a
way station route. But it is well to re
member that these islands were plant
ed a little too.near the equator to be a
crossroads of the north Pacific.—Bos
ton Herald. | : -
Wonderful Names.
- The seventeenth century juryman
had one disadvantage to contend with
from which his successor is happily
free. He was frequently burdened
with an intolerable name. James
- Broome in his “Travels Over England,
Scotland and Wales,” a work publish
ed in 1700, gives a copy of “a Jury
Return made at Rye, Sussex, in the
late Rebellious, Troublesome Times.”
Here are the names: “Stand fast on
- high Stringer of Crowhurst, Earth Ad
ams of Warbleton, Killsin Pimple of
\ Witham, Graceful Harding of Lewes,
Weep not Billing of the same, Be
- Faithful Joiner of Britling, Fly Debate
Roberts of the same, Fight the good
Flight of Faith White of Emes, Return
Spelman of Watling, Meek Brewer of
Oakham, More Fruit Fowler of East
Hodley, Hope for Bending of the
same.”—London Chronicle.
He Saved the Patent Office.
When in the war of 1812 the British,
who had taken Washington, trained
their guns upon the patent office Dr.
Thornton, throwing himself directly be
fore the guns, cried:
*Are you Englishmen or Goths and
Vandals? This is the patent office—a
depesitory of the ingenuity and inven
tions of the American nation in which
the whole civilized world is interested.
Would you destroy it? Then let the
charge pass through my body.”
And the building was spared. Twen
ty-four years afterward, however, it
was destroyed by fire, together with
everything in it.
Couldn’t Forget It.
“Saturday night some miscreant lug
ged off a whole cord of my wood, and
somehow I can’t forget about it,” de
clared Silas.
“Have you tried to forget it?” in
quired his friend.
“Yes. Sunday morning I went to
church, hoping I could get it off my
mind, and before I had been there five
minutes the choir started in singing
“The Lost Chord,’ so I got out.”—Judge.
Explanation.
“Wille, did you tie that tin can to
the dog’s tail?”
“Yes, sir,” replied the small boy.
“I'm trying to do a kind act every
day. That dog chases every rabbit he
sees, I tied the can to him so that
it will make a noise and warn the »ab
bit."—Washington Star.
Patent Office Documents,
If all the documents stored in the
patent office at Washington could be
placed end to end they would form a
strip that would reach around the earth
three times.
W “The Thinkers of the Counry
w Arethe Tobacco Chewer #-
e 2 said one of the greacest
thinkers this country
ever produced. ;o
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ENDURANCE . {
Is one of the biggest factors in modern warfzre. f
And tobacco is a powerful aid to endurance—- ‘
not strong, rank tobacco, but PICNIC TWIST, i
the mild, long-lasting chews, without black tobac
co’s jerk on the nerves.
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| "NICIWS CHEWING TOBAGCO |
Re 1 Youwant a cleantobacco that youcan .
Q_.gg‘,f,zfim?w chew all day? That means you want :
@A'M PICNIC TWIS'T, the mellow, softchew. [
;}M ,fl Try it once, and bid good-bye to :
e phiogedsipgl] black tobacco. Buy it by the twist or 1
mefufg:u:?’o%‘g ol y the air-excluding drum of 11 twists. :
." oests .’ fit 3 '
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» SR N OME autoists batter the life out
oo """ N Sof a car by useless speed, un
- N wise driving and constant neg
e N lect of little things.
W LM NN\ Don’t you do it.
e (8N N\ N\ Let haul gine and
B \ put e;l:ryot‘lfiflgauinyc;‘igto? lrl\]ximfig
I BN BeNE¥a . M| shape for the busy season strain.
R Then take good care of your car.
Let us overhaul your car now. Expert
mechanics to do the work. Prices low. Care
ful and efficient service. i
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W. P. Williams’ Garage
303-308 South Main St.—Fitzgerald—Phone 359
el oottt o i
Ocilla Southern Railroad Company
Schedules---Effective Friday, October 1, 1915
1 3 1
: Daily Daily Daily
Mixed
A. M. P. M. P. M.
SOUTH BOUND
Perry.:...................... Lv 445
BRI vvl i 5:30
BRRIVIIE.. . s e 6:15
R e i 6:58
R Lo 740
R L Lv 6:35 Lv 2:45 Ar 825
IR 0 * 3:17
Is Lo s i e 8:05 4:15
TN .. .. e Ar 837 Ar 455
A M. P. M. P. M.
NORTH BOUND
2 4 8
Daily Daily Daily
Mixed
AM¥ A M
DUOIEIR . vi s vsven i el Lv. 845 Lv 715
B B i 9:40 8:05
T i RN R 10:25 8:55
DO, 2 ... oo i e Ar 10:55 Ar 930 Lv 1120
R0che11e...:....-.....--...... 12:45
RPN ERY. .. .. ciciiia e 1:10
HAWEBHDWIRE. . ... .....0 000000 » 2:95
TR L il 315
SN i e Ar 3:42
A M. P. M. P.M.
(x) Passengers boarding trains north-bound at Pope City must hold
ticket reading to a point rorth of Hawkinsville.
Close connection is made with trains of the G. & F, A. C. L, A, B.
&A, S. A.L, Southern, W. &T. and G. S. &F. For further information
see ticket agents or communicate with S. Y. HENDERSON,
General Passenger Agent, Hawkinsville, Ga.