Newspaper Page Text
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 27, 1921.
DAILY TIME8-ENTERPRI8E TH6MASVILLE, GEORGIA.
PAGE SEVEN
You’ll get somewhere.
with a pipe and P. A.!
Cfn«i11 Attap o rrn Jti nf flia 1
told in toppy rod
bogs, tidy rod tins,
handoomo pound
dmtho
pound eryotol glass
humidor with
opongo moistonor
Tobacco Co.
Start fresh all oyer again at the beginning! Get a
pipe!—and forget every smoke experience you ever had
that spilled the beans! For a jimmy pipe, packed
brimful with Prince Albert, will trim any degree of
smokejoy you eyer registered! It’s a revelation!
Put a pin in here! Prince Albert can’t bite your
tongue or parch yoUr throat Both are cut out by our
exclusive patented process. So, just pass up any old
idea you may have stored away that you can’t smoke a
pipe! We tell you that you can—and just have the time
of your life on every fire-up—if you play Prince Albert
for packing!
What P. A. hands you in a pipe it will duplicate in a
home-made cigarette! Gee—but you’ll have a lot of
fun rolling 'em with Prince Albert; and, it’s a cinch
because P. A. is crimp cut and stays put!
Fringe Albert
the national joy tmoke
PLUIMGI- WIRING
GET OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU HAVE YOUR PLUMB
ING OR WIRING DONE
Let us tell you just what the cost will be. The all
around improvement will be worth* many times
the cost.
W. F. Martin
E. T. Moody, Mgr.
Phone 203
MEXICO AND JAPAN
NOW CLAIM RELATION
Mexico City, July 8. (By maU.)—
Mexico and Japan are sons of the
same mother. Prince Hirohito, hen
apparent to the throne of Japan, tola
the Pads correspondent of the El Un
iversal recently. He added:
“Destiny has willed that the two
countries be seperated and distant
for each other but the designs of de»
tiny are now clear, Japan and Mexico
fill a distinct mission in each conti
nent. Thoey are the guardinns of
civilization that is highly moral, the
sentinels of two races against barbar
ism.
“Mexico and Japan ought to draw
near to each other in order to fulfill
the alms of destiny that are marked
out for them. I wish for Mexico that
she may gain the power of will that
has transformed Japan into the power
that she is.”
Domestic Economy
is Easily Learned
YOU can take a free lesson every day, simply by reading the
advertising columns of this paper.
No matter how well you run your home—or your business
—it can be done better and more economically. The advertise
ments teach efficiency in buying. They show you the cheap
est and best markets.
They help make hpusework lighter by telling about the
newest conveniences and labor-saving devices. The mer
chant or business than can get a good line on a thousand and
one things that will help him materially.
No home and no business can progress by standing still.
The advertisements help you keep up with the bandwagon.
If you want a real lesson in economy,
Read the Advertisements
Flan to Reach Peace-Time
Strength by. July 31.-Offi
cers Surprised at the Num
ber of Resignations Coming
In at This Time.
Washington, D. C., July 27—Reduc
tion of the United States army to a
peace-time strength of 150,000 men
will be' accomplished by July 31 Id
accordance with the decision of Con
gress when it refused to appropriate
funds for pay of a greater force af
ter Oct. 1.
With the reduction. Secretary Weeks
announced yesterday, there would
be a general redistribution of troops,
practical abandonment of seven of
the great war-time army cantonments,
placement of many organizations on
the inactive list and skeltonization of
others into materially reduced
strength.
The cantonments to lie abandoned
"at the earliest practicable date" as
I announced by Secretary Weeks arc
Camps Devens, Mass., Sherman. O.,
Pike,' Ark., Grant, III., Jackson, S. C.,
Meade, Md., except for a small detach
ment, and Bragg, N. C.
Those to be retailed under the
plank of reorganization are Dix, N.
J„ Travis, Tex., Lewis, Wash., and
Knox, Ky.
The War Secretary said It was his
plan eventually to remove all troops
from the cantonments to be vacated
and to salvage ,the greater part of
the buildings. It was not his pur
pose, he said, to sell the land, but to
retain it as well as the utilities and
Improvements such as storehouses,
water systems, railroad tracks
suid there would be used It future ap
propriations permitted an expansion
of the citizens military training camps.
There was considerable surprise
among army officers when it was
found that the enlisted strength would
be* fedqccd to the 150,000 mark by
July 31. Only a few had believed it
possible that the men would resign
under Secretary Weeks’ order in num
bers sufficiently large to effect the
reduction from approximately 220,000
men in June to the smaller figure be
fore winter.
Secretary Weeks recently instruct
ed corps area and divisional command
ers to permit the men within the con
tinental boundaries to resign during
July upon application without forfeit
ing travel pay to their homes or the
|50 bonus which they received ordi
narily when their enlistments expir
ed. The resignations literally poured
In and caused the Secretary to re
voke his order before the month was
ended. Mr. Weeks’ said yesterday
that the applications already received
would bring the enlisted strength to
the 150,000 mark by July 31, It requir
ing that period of time for the exist
ing machinery to care for the paper
work Involved in the discharges of
so many men.
Orders to commanding officers for
them to prepare to move to new sta
tions and advising others that their
units had been placed upon the “in
active lists” with the selection of
‘parent organizations" to care
records and equipment have been sent
out by Adjt. Gen. Harris as a part of
the -scheme for reorganization. In
each Instance, the adjutant general
said, the commanding officers have
been Instructed not to change stations
of their oommands until later when
suppllmental Instructions for the
movement would be issued by the do
partment.
The nine training centers selected
by the Secretary are:
First, coast defenses of Boston; sec*
ond Fort Slocum, New York; third.
Camp Meade, Md.; fourth, Fort Mc
Pherson, Ga.; fifth, Camp Knox. Ky.;
sixth, Fort Sheridan. IU.; seventh.
Fort Snelllng, Minn.; eighth. Fort
Sam Houston, Tex,: and ninth, at the
Presidio, San Francisco. These cen
ters will be maintained for the train
ing of civilians.
Headquarters of the Tenth brigade
at Camp Jackson, S. C.. will be mov
ed to Jefferson barracks, Missouri.
The Sixth Infantry at Camp Jackson,
will go to Jeffersbn barracks, except
two companies, which ore detailed to
Fort Crook, Neb., and the Eleventh
Infantry at Camp Jackson to Fort
Thomts, Ky., except for one battalion
which goes to Columbus barracks, and
two companies ot Fort Benjamin Har
rison.
TAe - Fifth Division at Camp Jack-
son, S. C„ will be reduced to a bri
gade and stationed at Jefferson bar
racks, Missouri.
Other Infantry commands placed on
the Inactive list and for which par
ent organisations are designated in
clude the Thirty-second. Thirty-sev
enth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth. Forty-
first, Forty-fourth. Forty-sixth, Forty-
eighth, Forty-ninth, Fifty-first, Fifty-
second, Fifty-fifth. Fifty-sixth. Slxleth,
Sixty-first, Sixty-second and Sixty-third
regiments.
Field artillery units placed on the
inactive list include the Fifth and Sev
enteenth at Camp Bragg, the Nine
teenth at Camp Jackson, and Fort
Myer, Va., the Twentieth at Camp
Jackson.
The headquarters of the First Cav
alry Division, to be organized, will be
stationed at Fort Bliss, Tex., and will
Include Troop A, ot the Sixth Caval
ry, at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga.
BOLSHEVIK .SOLDIERS Ifavorue books for
GUARD RUSSIAN BORDER; Boaton . July 2 — The adventllre of
. | D'Artagnan, Midshipman East, Tom;
Warsaw, July 6. (by mail.)—The: sawyer and the other favorites of
Bolshevik soldiers guard the Russian halt-century standing are still eager- ■
border and only certain persons are '7 rea< * b 7 the children In spite of;
given permission to leave the country,
yet by bribery and other means,
great numbers of persons are crossing
to adjacent countries each night.
Polish government officials have
estimated that about 50,000 have en
tered Poland from Russia every
month, despite efforts of Polish au
thorities to eep them out. Only a
very small percentage of these people
carry th proper credentials from the
Bolshevik!.
A recent arrival in Warsaw from
Russia was Ralph Rimar, formerly an
art student in Detroit and Charlesioi.,
W. Va., who left America via Canada,
early in January this year, with 700
other Russians. Rimar went to the
United States eight years ago from a
the "jazz literature that has invaded
the field. Miss Alice 1. Hazeltine,
supervisor of the children’s depart
ment in the St. Louis Public Library,
in addressing the fifth annual lnstl-.
tute of Llbraians held here recently,
said the well-thunded times in which
a dozen generations had sought guld-.
nnce as to piratical habits were still 1
read with the unwavering stare and i
concentration that heeds not the din-,
ner-bell.
She added that moving pictures had
had no evil influence of the children's
regdlng; in fact more children every:
month were coming to visualize the
greatest adventures of all time be-;
tween the covers of a boos.
She advocated a more widespread!
introduction ot foreign history stores;
CITY CAFE
JOHN GRIGORIOU, PROP.
I have moved my Quick
Lunch and Restaurant
business from Broad to
North Madison Street,
adjoining The Grand
Theatre and am now
ready to serve the public.
Good Restaurant Service
Regular Dinners, Cigars,
Cigarettes, Soft Drinks,
Bottled Sodas, Etc.
JOHN GRIGORIOU.
part of Russia which is now Included, f or children and advised that they be
within the Polish republic where his taught to read stories and blogra-
parents reside. ; phles of American life. ;
Rcmar says that when he last saw
the immigrants whom he haa accom- [
panied to Russia all had haa enough WOULD GIVE ALL FORMER I
of the Bolshevik regime and wished SOLDIERS SPECIAL PRIVILEGE
. Ottawa, Ont., July 2T.—If Canada’s
soldior-farmcrs were to pool their
holdings they would have one giant
farm of 5,000,000 acres, dotted with
grain fields, cattle, hogs, patches of
fruit trees, silos and many sturdy
houses and farm buildings.
Population of this one big figura
tive farm according to a report on
the work of the Soldier Settlement
Board, would be more than 126,000
estimating an average family of five
to each settler. '
The: actual number of ex-service
men who have been placed on land
through government aid is 25,443
Short courses have been held in idle
months and all phases ot mixed farm
ing, scientific dairying and purebred
cattle raising given intensive study,
according to the report. Experts have
been sent Into many districts to pro-
vice continuous supervision.
As a result of the aid, financial and
educational, a very high percentage
of the men are becoming successful
farmers, the report says.
they were back in the States.
Rimar was in Russia three months,
visiting Petrograd, Moscow. Kiev and
other cities and towns. Conditions
generally, he said, were gradually be
coming worse everywhere. He is
eager to return to the States, but,
without credentials, is unable to get
a passport.
Remar says he went to Russia to
satisfy his curiosity and forfun—but
that he didn’t have any pleasure at all,
and thpt his curiosity is thoroughly
satisfied. He was arrested five times
went without a square meal for 12
wees and that if he is ever able to
get back to the United States he will
stay put there for all time.
HARDWICK INSISTENT ON
SALE GOVERNOR'S MANSION
—Picture Frames,
—Prcmo Cameras,
—Kodak Films.
Special Attention Given
to Kodak Finishing.
MoUer’s Photo Stndio.
BROAD STRIBT
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
Atlanta, Ga., July 27.—There call
be no reasonable dissent from Gover
nor Hardwick's recent special mes
sage on the urgent need and the
business advisability of disposing of — —
the State’s present Executive Man- j p#r Cle . nlng LHther .
skra property, according to newspaper A Ter> euod leather drei , lnl „
edtors and_ lawmakers who have dls* composed of equal parts of glycerin
cussed the subject. | and sweet elL After applying this
I have ben unable to use It.” said ?> l,tor * **«*• • clot ^ U should be
„ „ ,v„ left cu the leather fer 20 minutes,
Governor Hardwick, who is under the ^ wtlleb ttM leaUwf ^
necessity of making his home at a 1rtped dr,, ordinary soap and w*.
hotel. “It is unsanitary, unhealthful, igr make# a good cleanser for
and, In my opinion, lte occupancy. leather, the soap being applied with
would Imperil the health, to say noth- a sponge and wiped off with a
Ing of the comfort of whoever under, *La“ols skin,
took to live in It."
To thla same purport wrote Gover
nor Dorsey, Governor Harris and
Governor Slaton In repeated recom
mendations to the Georgia Legists- j
ture. I
Georgia, as has been pointed ont;
ha sseveral things to face before a,
criticising public, and among them'
her failure to provide her chief ex» I
cutlve with, a decent place In which
to live.
The state, as has been shown, can
sell the worn-out mansion on Peach
tree street, buy a new mansion and
have more than a quarter of a million
dollars to apply to the reduction ot
the bonded debt of the state.
And, It might be added. It need not
figure In the capltol removal question
gt all.
AUTO PAINTING
calomel tablets that are ‘
nausealess, safe and sure.
a
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
COMES IN LIKE JUNK-
GOES OUT LIKE NEW
That's what our expert
auto painting does foe a
car. By skillful manipula
tion of the paint brush, the
proper paint sad finish, we
can make most any auto
look as though It had Just
hailed from the factory.
Better than the factory fln--
Ish—that’s what we can
give your car. Adds many
dollars to Its value.
A. W. PALIN & SON
254-250 SOUTH BROAD STREET