Newspaper Page Text
1
\\
• V”
-*•
PAGE TWO
_ ‘ \
Tire (Eljerakec ^duanrc
CANTON, GEORGIA
P. RucUmP
Efliloi
V>S-vv S Hj
THE CHEROKEE ADVANCE, CANTON, GEORGIA
REU CROSS PUTS
UP $9,739,872
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1022
KILL THE WEEVILS NOW
Official Organ
The Cherokee Advance is the Official
,, lv vl „.». , v Orgun of the
County of Cherokee and the municipality of Canton On
A “kill Tic weevil now’ campaign Is being waged,
"Now” is a good word. The farmer who makes any
showing at nil not only begins to fight the weevil early,
but finds plenty to do every day in the year to,keep svcn
a toe-hold gainst the bugs. It’s an eter present, ever
lasting job, but worth while if we are to hold our,i vvn
ns n cotton crowing section.—The Eatonton Messenger
BRIGHT BITS
Rate of Subscription
f
One Year . ..
. *1/0!
Ssiv Month- ..
Tf.r
Invariably in Advance :
The Cherokee Advance is entered
1
at the Cmiton 1
Postoffic e mail matter of the second
class under A< 1|
I Congress.
.1
The coal strike did a lot to make fire-preventation
week a success.— Washington Post.
It appears that the Turks have the prophet and the
Allies the 5o;s.—Washington Post.
The twelve destroyers to go to Smyrna ought 4 o On
T'loyd George has finally coftie to the conclusion that
now it can
Journal,
be told—at $48,665 a word.—Mhvnukee
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 19:12
THE VISION OF HENRY GRADY
Henry W Grady, once said:
When ev ry farmer in the South shall eat broad ft\m
her moral support-
remain unsupported.-
I is own field and meat from his own pastures and. dw
1 orbed by no creditor nnd enslaved by no debt, shall sit
amidst his teeming gardens, orchards, vineyards, dairies,
r d barnyards, pitching his crops in his own wisdom and
growing th. m in independence, making cotton his clean
s.rplus and oiling it in his own time nnd in Ms own
chosen mnrl.et nnd not at his master's bidding got
Ms pay in cash nnd nothin a receipted mortgage that lis-
charges hi? debt but dries not restore his freedom—then
shall be the breaking of the fullness of our day.’’
The 3e*t Thoughts of the Be*t Thi n k p r«
Next to knowing when to seize an opportunity, 4 he
most important in life is to know when to forego an ad
vantage,—Beaconsfield.
The power of invention has been conferred by nature
upon few, and the labor of learning those sciences which
may by mere labor be obtained is too great to be willing
ly endured. —Johnson.
In the adversity of our best friends we often find
something which docs not displease.—Rochefoucauld.
Let fortune do her worst, whatever she makes ns lase,
iis long as she never makes us lose our honesty nnd our
independence.—Pope.
The gifted man Lears his gifts into the world, not for
h s own benefit but for the people among whom ho is
placed; for the gifts are not his; he himself is a gift lo
the community. That is the way Life gives gifts to the
people; it wraps them up in men and sends them forth
—Ford.
Confidence is a plant of slow growth.—Pite.
Each gets ^ie share proportioned to his powers —
Still it loc ks like- poor tne ties for Kemal to ma -ae-re
out of exist ,nce practically all his prospective taxpay
ers.—Dallas News.
Russia hue promised Turkey
which means that Turkey will
Nashville SooDiern Lumberman.
At that an inflated currency can’t do Germany as
much harm as the inflated ego did.—Manchester Herald.
They say shoes will he cheaper during the winter, bn
they do not tell us what winter.—New York American.
“Shall we finance Germany ’’ ask the Allies in a wist
ful tone lond enough for Uncle Sam to hear.—Wall
Street Journal.
I he ballot may be the freeman's weapon, hut -xovri
ence has r.lsn *hr.vr. that he rum bruise him elf
with it.—New York Call.
India's method of judging a man by his caste is about
ns intelligent ns our method of judging him by hi.- cash.
Buffalo Evening News.
We fancy Mr. Hear t has his moments of depression
when he feels that it is useless for him to waste any
more of his time nnd money trying to save New York.
Columbia Record.
Year’s Budget Stresses Relief
and Services at Home
and Overseas.
MILLIONS FOR VETERAN AID
Over $3,000,000 Allotted to the
Disabled—Foreign Work
Lessens.
A PARTISAN PRESS
The recent campaign serves to further illiterate the
tact that the day of the partisan newspaper in a politi
cal campaign is past, although some few are slow lo
lealn it. rile efforts of the Atlantn Georgian nr.d Mi
con Telegraph, for instance, wore particularly nauseat
ing and only served to make the defeat of their favorite,
Hardwick, ail the more overwhelming. Tjio province
a newspaper is to give the nows of a campaign in an un
biased manm r and'to discuss the issues in an intelligent
wiiy editor-illy, not to cxtoll the virtues of its favorite
i nndidntc the while maligning his opponent. Some of the
pnpers, not-ihly the Atlanta Constitution nnd Journal,
learned this lesson long go. hut it takes longer to eon-
vinoe some of the others.—Thomason Times.
It is seriously doubted if a newspaper has a mo'i.l
i ight to take a partisan stand in politics. It is the duty *
Juvenal.
Labor, wide as the earth, has its summits in heaven.
-Carlyle. . r ,
Character gives splendor to youth, and nwe to wrinkled pubHcTaw aif 0 "™ 0 , 8 * « t0 **'1 th * " CWS nml lf?t th '
skin and gray hairs.—Emerson. f. ,aw ,ts conclusions. The public, which pays
a — „„ i ... _ r* money and mnWjs a. newspaper possible, is ontitbd tr
A man s own conscience is his own tribunal; and k* lairihe new?, thaf*XnWi that is clean nnd legit ini.-.b-
_CAre uo more for that phantom ,‘opinion” Iho Jfcf the puMfe gets if, one-sided account of a polities' cam
i!LEvSon* U f He Cr ° M thC th * ’’ ,lblic t0 that extent is ke Pt in th!! ( >«»k.
There is no place in Georgia for a partisan press.
Pressing problems are before the state and it is the lutv
mind to love.—Drydt-n.
A light Start lives long.-—Shakespeare.
Let him who gropes painfully in the dark or uncertain
light and prays vehemently that the dawn may ripen
into day, lay this precept well to heart: “Do thy duty
which lies noaresr to thee” which then knowest to bo a
duty! Thy second duty will already have come clearer.
—Carlyle.
of the pub!;.; to tnckle these problems with determ'na-
tion and wi rk for the permanent welfare nnd prosperity
of, the fommonwealth.
It is very much to he hoped that wc will see less m l
less of the partisan press, and more and more of news-
papers that Hand foursquare to all the winds that blow
John Rymer
Dealer in
Phonographs, Pianos,
Player Pianos and
v Organs
Latest Records Aiwa] s in Stock.
Leading Lines;- Livingston, York and
Weaver Pianos
Washington.—Expenditures totaling
$1),730,872.47 for carrying through its
program of services and relief during
♦ he fiscal year In the United Stales
nnd overseas are authorized In the
budget of the American Red Cross, ef
fective July 1, 1022. This total Is $2,-
73.'i,07. r t less than the expenditures for
the last fiscal year, when disburse
ments reac hed *12.475,847.60, It is an
nounced at National Headquarters In
a statement riiiphii'rizlpg the necessity
of continued support of the organiza
tion by enrollment during the annual
Roll Call, November 11-November 30
inclusive, lids total for the budget
Is exclusive of tin- large financial op
erations of the 3,30(1 active Red Cross
Chapters, which, it is estimated, will
more than double the total.
War Veterans Have First Call
First call on Red Cross funds Is for
the disabled ex-servlee men, of whom
27,487 were receiving treatment from
the Government on June 1 last. This
work for veterans and their families
111 a wide variety of service that the
Government is not authorized to ren
der and for which it has neither
funds, nor facilities has the call on
$3,U3i.i,6{)2.!mi during tlie current year,
or about stum.ooo more than was ex
tended last year for soldier service.
Adding the funds disbursed In this
humanitarian work of physical recon
stitution following the World War by
the chapters throughout the country
will approximate a total for the cur
rent year approaching $10,000,000.
This work, In the opinion of the Sur
geon General's office, will not reach
il$ peak before 1020.
Through Its Chapters the American
Red Cross Is equipped to find the in
dividual ex-service man, help him In
hie problems and difficulties, provide
Immediately for his necessities, nnd
open the way for him to the Govern
ment compensation and aid to which
he Is entitled. The extension of this
work to the families of such men
pnmgj to them that the Red Cross
hsDRst none of Its sympathy nor will
totfirphe manifested in wartime. Sim
ilarly the service goes out to the men
still In the Army and Navy, 11,087 of
whom wore under treatment In Gov
ernment hospitals on June 1, 1022.
Grsattr Domestic Program
This year—after five years of con
structive effort during the war and
after the armistice— brings with It a
greater responsibility for domestic
service lo the American Red Cross.
The budget for foreign operations,
however, totals $3,401,000, but of this
amount $1,8.34.000 1/ for medical re
lief and hospital supplies for Russia,
which is a part of the gift made by
the American Red Cross In 1021 to
the Russian famine relief work of the
American Relief Administration pro
gram. The child health service in Eu
rope continues, moreover, and $654,-
000 is appropriated for this work un
dertaken in 1020. other items in the
stringently diminished foreign pro
gram include $200.0410 to 'support the
League of Red Cross Societies, $22,-
♦4*0 for nurses' training schools insti
ll.ted by the Red Cross abroad, and
$600,000 for liquidation of the general
Red Cross foreign relief program.
Prepared for Emergencies
F<fr disaster relief the Red Cross
has set aside $750,000, and for emer
gencies In Chapter work $500,000
to lie available for domestic, Insular
and foreign demands. This Is more
than v $.'105,000 above last year's expen
ditures. For service and assistance
to the 3,300 Chapters and their
branches $1,293,000 is provided by the
National organization.
Other budget items of Importance
in the domestic program include $200,-
000 for assistance to other organiza
tions and education institutions for
training Red Cross nurses and work
ers ; $190,000 for Roll Call assistance
furnished to Chapters; $100,000 for
unforeseen contingencies.
Of the total budget less than $500,-
000 Is allotted for management in the
National organization. No cash esti
mate, of course, is possible to weigh
’lie value of the service by volunteers
in the Chapters.
THE RED CROSS
SUPPLEMENTS .
GOVERNMENT SERVICE
BY MEETING THE
PARTICULAR NEEDS
OF THE INDIVIDUAL
EX-SERVICE ' MAN.
THIS WORK CANNOT
GO ON UNLESS YOU
SUPPORT IT WITH
YOUR MEMBERSHIP
DOLLAR
PAY UP TODAY
Children Cry for Fletcher’s
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of.
on the wrapper all these years'
just to protect the coming'
generations. Do not be deceived.^
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and ChUdren—Experience against Experiment.
Ne ver attempt to relieve your baby with'a
remedy that you would use for yourself, 1
What is CASTOR IA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric,
Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is pleasant. It contains
neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its
f-ge is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has
heen in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency,
Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising
therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids
the assimilation of Food ; giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Comfort—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
In Use Fop Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
the CENTAL.!, company,
Bulck Service Protects
Buick Owners Everywhere
Bulck owner* everywhere recognise this blue and
fchite emblem of authorised service as /urthdf
Aaeuranca of dependable Buick performance.
Experience haa abown Buick owners that“authorise4T
larvlce meana a conscientious, helpful interest In th!
, Continued and perfect operation of their Buickft.
Authorised service Isa guarantee of skilled labor from
fcechanlcs of long axperlence on Buick cara. and that
♦very new part la ganulne. factory-made or the aaffle
high quality aa the original unit.
It is an assurance that tha establishment is conducted
4c serve Buick owners first, last, and always In thl
way that will continue the dependable performance
built into every Buick car.
p-15-M-tq
Canton Buick Co.
Only the
Best for me!
declares the woman
who takes pride in
the kind of food she
sets before her family.
She knows it doesn’t pay
to waste her good efforts
and her good flour, eggs
and other materials by
using anything but
ROYAL—the best bak
ing powder made.
It Contains No Alum
Leaves No Bitter Taste