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way about your smolong—they satisfy!
But they’re mild, too—Chesterfields are!
For the first time in the history of cigarettes
you are offered a cigarette that satisfies and
yet is mild! Chesterfields!
This new kind of enjoyment cannot be had
in any cigarette except Chesterfields, regard-
less of price—because no other
maker rj)n copy the Chesterfield ble
Try Chesterfields—today!
BEGINNING MONDAY, JULY
24th WE WILL BUY YOUR OLD
i NEWSPAPERS, MAGAZINES,
'CIRCULARS, BOOKS, LETTERS
AND CATALOGUES. WE PAY
i 25c PER HUNDRED POUNDS FOR
ANY" KIND OF OLD PAPER DE
LIVERED AT OUR OFFICE
EITHER IN BAGS OR BUNDLES.
IT MUST BE CLEAN
We cannot handle it if it is
mixed^with dirt. Wf will also
buy scrap brass and lead.
THE VIENNA NEWS
COOK COUNTY LOSES
OUT IN THE HOUSE
Atlanta, Ga., July.—The till cre
ating Ccok county from the western
portion of Berrien county with Adel
ns the county seat, went to a vote in
the house on Tuesday and lac'.cd ' l
vote3 of passing. The vote was 116
for the bill and 52. against, it being
a constitutional amendment, the bill
required a two-thirds vote of the
whole house of 126.
Representative Knight; of Ber
rien, author of the bill gave notice
of a motion to reconsider, which
keeps the bill alive. The house on
Tuesday passed a bill appropriating
160,000 to the South Georgia Nor
mal and industrial Co'legc. at Val
dosta.
The senate Tuesday passed a bill
providing for biennial sessions of
the general assembly Senator Pea
cock author of the bill, has compan
ion bills to make the term of the
governor four years and to raise the
per dio-n of legislator * from four to
six dollars.
Praise French Writer's Work.
Rena Benjamin, hailed as the new
French Kipling, was bom in -Paris 30
years ago. He has worked for the
newspapers and contributed to the
magaaines and reviews. The book
which has given him such a high place
in literature is “daspard," a novel,
which is spoken of by the Stench as
the one literary masterpiece of the
war. The author, comes from on in
teresting, family, being the grandson
of the engraver, Ernest Hue, who died
recently; the son of Ernest Benjamin,
a novelist cut off before his prime,
who was a member of the executive
committee of the Soclete des Gens de
Lettres, and the nephew of the emi
nent veterinarian, Henri Benjamin,
who is one of the, hundred members
-of the Academle de Medeclne. Here
tofore none of bis writings attracted
any large share of attention.
When the Robins Are Busy.
The little tree sparrow, who stays
’ around in winter, gets very stout in
- the cold weather, with % layer of fat
j, from an eighth to a quarter of an inch
‘ I thick between his skin and his or-
1 dinary flesh. The gull, which seems
so harmless in the harbor, will take
, clams and dfop them from on high
| onto the hardest rock or closest packed
sand he can find to break their shells,
jl Twenty times is none too many to try
, before he gives up entirely if it cannot
; be done before. Everyone knows
] about robins, of course, but it Is still
fascinating to watch them making
I nests. And they are doing it now.
! early in the morning, when tho twigs
and- grass are damp and pliable from
I the night dew.—Exchange.
Now is the time to start
your advertising campaign for
Fall Business;
All kinds of advertising is
goods your Weekly paper is best.
Letters, circulars and cata
logues are also good.
Give us a regular contract
for the next three months and
watch the results.
No use sending out of tt>wn
for anything to be printed. We
can give you just as good work
on just as good material as
anybody. \l
We will make the price just
as reasonable as any responsi
ble firm.
We can give you more
prompt service and save the
freight or express.
Figure with us before send
ing your order away from home
j , ,. New Norwegian Induetry.
I Norwegian fish cannors, who "have
{been endeavoring to become independ
ent of other countrlea for their supply
of tinplate, have been eucceiaful in
I their attempt* to eecure eufflclent capi
tal for the erection of rolling mill! in
their city. Thw plant tor the new mills
provide for a yearly production of at
least 30,000 tons; their erection will
cost more than $1,000,000, and they
will employ 400 to <00 men. The elec
tric machinery to be Installed will pro
duce 1,600 horse power, but the maxi
mum production wiR not be reached
tor three or tour years.
Like a Lome run
'with tbe bases full- satisfy t
Ninth inning—bases full—two out—tie score
—batter up. Bemg!—that “homer” into, the
rtatA makes you feel good—it does satisfy!
8afety for ths Aviator.
War aviators can now provide them
selves with safety tubes containing a
powerful artificial firework device
with a parachute and reflector. One
can almost in an instant start the Are
and release the parachute light, which,
descending nearer the earth, lights
up a Urge area with its powerful rad!-*
agpe. besides daisling the gunners
who try to destroy the airship. Har
old B. Sherwln Holt of Farnborough.
England, U the patentee.—“Wonders
of Today,” National Ifagaslne.
10 for Sc
Also packed
20 for 10c
tkwSATKU'
—and yet they're MILS}
, In War.
To prove that science still grapples
me to 1U soul with hoops of steel—or
to Invert Shakespeare, to prove how I
have successfully grappled with
science. I am setting down a few facts,
sprinkled with sundry personal obser
vations and deductions which cannot
fail to Interest—but here, I am not
writing an advance notice tor a press
sheet.
Stars are of two kinds—those we
can see when we gate into the
heavens, and those that come to us
when we strike up against lamp-posts
and brawny flats. Being a bit of a
scientist, the former have troubled me
Jot a little. When I discovered that
the earth U but a minute object In the
cosmos, that the stars which Lean see
when I look into the realms of, space
demand fpr alcohol tor
explosives U so heivy that marufao-
turers have looked around for some
thing cheaper than coiii - They found
it in Louisiana blackstrap, and that
sticky, slow-flowing commodity now
goes into the makeup of one of the
most tremendous energies In -the
world. It has proved such a success
that 1U price Is now about four times
what it was two years ago.
THE VIENNA NEWS
There teems no connection between z t ol /
pitSe oftfngertreaOnda1*22 bojron<1 the fl “ htn * *»•» *<«»• are
>5" and yetthereis The name of ,lmU * r *° on# rm on ’ “ d «»o
ana yes were u. ronamsoz wh0l8 u bIunderta , t0 „ un .
Jl iV*LS3j known end. it seemed ridiculous to
“Ljf shave myself or attempt to thatch that
bald roof of mine.—“Finis,” Oscar
",Frichet, In National Magasina
Clemency Shown To Harry McQueen
By The President.
Washington, July.—President
Wilson otday commuted to expire
at once a five-year prison sentence
imposed in Harry McQueen, who
pleaded guilty in 1914 to embezzel-
ing funds from the First National
bank, of Lyons, Ga. McQueen is
in bad health. His previous good
character and proof that he used
the money taken to support younger
sisters and brothers won him his
freedom.
Messrs. Geo. and Dan McLeod, of
ITneview, were here Tuesday.
fltarvatlon in Japan.
Failure of the rice crop and the
fishing Industry have brought the die
trlcts of Tohoku and Hokkajdo, north-
era Japan, one of the worst famines
that the country has faced in a hum
dred years. Cold weather prevented
the rice from heading out, and unusu
ally cold currents have kept the flab
at great distances from the Shoes,
A conservative estimate places Ota
number who are now in urgent need
of flood at 300,000.
”1 see there’s a great deal of talk
In toWn about vivisection," said Mrs.
Bast Side. “Well,” replied Mrs. West
Bide, “I’ve raised a family of eight,
an* they alnt one of them ever been
vivisect!onatod and none of ’em has
ever caught smallpox either. I don’t
take no stock in It”—Livingston
Sprinkler Has Wheels
An Ingenious professor In a western
university has combined a lawn sprin
kler with a dismantled lawn mowpr in
such a way that one can move tho
sprinkler about the lawn while It is
running, without getting wet says
Popular Mechanics. The long crossbar
of the sprinkler wss clamped to the
bottom of the mower after the blades
had been removed. In place of the or
dinary handle a long pole wss at
tached to the transformed mower,
which reached well outside the range
of the running water. This permits
Activities of Women.
Paris opened its universities to
women in 1868.
Many Canadian terms are being
worked by women.
English women worked as barbers
as tar back as the eighteenth cen
tury.
Philadelphia has over one thousand
nine hundred girls registered in its
continuation
The sacred precincts of the fashion-
ble restaurants of England, where for
merly none but French and German
waiters were allowed to work, are now
being invaded by women.
The first daily newspaper in the
world is said to have been established
and edited by a woman in London.
It was called the Dally Couraht, edited
by Elisabeth Malet
Selma LagerloL the Bwedlsh author-',
ess, and only woman to ever receive
the Nobel prise for literature, makes
nearly as much from her herd of Jer
que to move the device about the lawn _ „„ ... . . v .
without the inconvenience of turning *** cow * — *°* doe * q er “°°**-
off the water. 'I
LITTLE GRAINS OF OPPORTUNITY accumulate into a con
siderable saving of money at the end of the year. Don’t let them
slip by. This week’s opportunity in house furnishing goods, jewelry,
etc.. Is the beet yet and you’ll do wise to come here as soon as you
can. We have made a remarkable purchase from a house that
needed money at once, to we’ve got our own prices. We’U share the
profits with you if you act quickly.
Vienna Ten Cent Company
4