The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, July 13, 1916, Image 2
Where Draughon Graduates Are
...Employed...
Go to the banks, and you will find that Draughon graduates are their cashiers.
Go to the factories, and you will find that Draughon graduates are their accountauts.
Go to the wholesale Houses, and you will find that Draughon graduates are their man
agers.
Go to the Railway offices, and you will find Draughon graduates are their chief [clerks
or officials.
Go to “Uncle Sam,” and you will find that Draughon graduates are his most trusted
servants.
Go wherever business requires the most efficient office help, and there you will find
Draughon graduates.
The aggregate annual income of the graduates of Draughon’s great chain of Colleges,
at an estimated average salary of $75 a month is One Hundred and Eighty Million
Dollars.
Endorsed by more Bankers than all Other Business Colleges in the South
Combined-Enter Any Time-Catalog Free.
DRAUGHON’S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLECE
Cor Forsyth and Mitchell Sts. H. R. TODD, Supt.
Atlanta, Ga.
Three fMillion Auto Tires made—
: r c——by GOODRICH, in year 1915
ti
S TUDY tho Price-List publicly printed below.
Compare with the List-Prices of other Tires made in LESSER
Volume.
Observe that competing Prices are higher in almost the exact proportion
{that VOLUME of production is smaller.
n This, when Qualiti/ approaches the Goodrich Standard,
r _ Cut our 1915 Tire Output (of 3,000,000 Auto and Truck Tires) to One-third,
(and it would still far exceed the Average of all Competing Makes or Brands,
t But, that huge reduction in Volume MIGHT result in every Tire we made
Jcosh'wp you One-third MORE than present prices.
They would not,—and could not,—be BETTER Tires, at this necessarily
I higher-cost to Us, and higher-price to You. ,
i Because,—Goodrich Tires are nut made “up to a price,”—nor "down to
la price.”
w:
T, first of all, make the BEST Fabric Tires that cur 47-year Experi-'
enee in Rubber-Working,—our huge Purchasing-Power, and the,
most Advanced Equipment, renders possible.
Then we let Cost fall where it will.
To that Cost we add a moderate, and fair, Profit for Ourselves and for our
(Dealers. -
i Then we let VOLUME rise,—as it will.
The more Tires we Make, the LESS each Tire COSTS vs to produce,—and
the less it costs YOU to buy them. (
The more Tires we Sell, the less profit, per Tire, WE NEED, for dividends.
The more Tires we make, the better we KNOW HOW to make them,—the
more we have at Stake on Quality,—and Satisfaction to Consumers.
And,—because of all this,—
— The BEST Fabric Tires that Skill,—Experience,—Good-Faith, and Maximum
'Volume, can build,—are now available to YOU at the VERY MODERATE Faiisliil
Prices here quoted.
-t'
Why pay more for ANY Fabric Tire ?
- THE B. F. GOODRICH CO., Akron, 0.\
Goodrich “Fair-List” Prices
NOTICE,—These Tires are as perfect as Fabric Tires can be made.
But. should any dissatisfaction whatever arise, with any Goodrich Tire, its Owner is invited.'
and REQUESTED, to take the matter up promptly with us,—the Makers.
He will find that Fair, Square, and LIBERAL treatment will always be extended, on all
er adjustments.
ell •:
30x3
30x3\s[j
32x3’
33x4
Ford Sizes
THE n
$10.40
34x4
$13.40
35x4’j
1 $15.45
36x4?
[$22.00
37x5
(Safety Treads) ■<
$22.40
$31.20
$31.60
l $37.35
—■3a£JC. , e£Jp*"'—-- —•xajwr"-?
GOODRICH—
Bkd* “Barefoot” Tires
99-
“TEXTAN
i
y —-Wears longer than Leather!
1* Waterproof!
Ask your Shoe Dealer, or Shoe Repairer, for Textan Soles on your next pair of Shoot,
-Does for your SHOE Soles what black “Bare*
foot-Rubber" Joes for Goodrich Tire Soles.
-«*'■ «»*»**+*
—Ia mow Flexible (k#a
—1* EASIER oa yetr Kwlt
-1* Non-slippcry!-
—la Lighter than Leather!
to
ANTI-TUBERCULOSIS
FORCESJN GEORGIA
The Georgia Section of the
Tuberculosis Directory, prepared
for the National Association for
the Study and Prevention of
Tuberculosis by the Raoul Found
ation, lists one organization in the
state doing a state-wide work,
the Foundation, and twelve do
ing local work.
The local organizations are the
following. Committee of the
Raoul Foundation, Albany; Am
ericas and Sumter County Hos
pital Association, Americus;
Anti-Tuberculosis Associ at i o n,
Atlanta; Committee of the Asso
ciated Charities, Augusta; Com
mittee of the Raoul Foundation,
1 Brunswick; District Nurses As
sociation, Columbus; Committee
of the Lesche Club, Dalton; Red
Cross Chapter, Macon; Anti-Tu
berculosis Association, Milledge-
ville; Committee of the Raoul
Foundation, Rome; Margaret
Bottome Circle Kings’ Daughters
Savannah; and Committee of the
Woman’s Club, Thornasville.
Two of the above institutions
conduct clinics, the Association
and the Macon Red Cross Chap
ter. These and two others, the
Margaret Bottome Circle in Sav
annah and the Brunswick Com
mittee, employ nurses to visit
and treat patients in their
homes.
The Directory also lists seven
institutes that during the year,
have given sanatorium treat
ment to patients. They are
Battle Hill, Atlanta; Charity Hos
pital, Brunswich; Tuberculosis
Department or the Georgia Pri
son Farm, Milledgeville; Tuber
culosis Department Georgia Sani
tarium, Milledgeville; Muscogee
County Tuberculosis Hospital,
Colubums; State Tuberculosis
Sanitarium, Alto; Tuberculosis
Depatment U. S. Penitentiary
Atlanta. The report made to
the Foundation show that on
the 1st of January there were
526 patients receiving treatment
in these institutions.
The General Directory, just
now ott the press ot the National
' Association, lists from the Union
at large nearly 3000 agencies
fighting tuberculosis, an increase
of nearly 1600 per cent since
1904. When the National As
sociation was formed in 1904,
the list of agencies included
only 183 organizations and ins
titutions. The death rate at that
time in the vital statistics area
was 200.7. In 1914, ten years
thereafter, it had fallen to 146.8,
a reduction of a little more than
25 per cent.
Literature on the campaign in
Georgia and methods of preven
tion and cure can be obtained
free of charge by writing to the
Raoul Foudation, 303 Candler
Building, Atlanta, Ga.
NOT THE ONLY ONE
There Are Other Bainbridge People Sim
ilarly Situated.
Can there be any stronger
proof offered than the evidence
of Bainbridge residents? After
you have read the following,
quietly answer the question.
Mrs. W. A. Cooper, 624 Sharp
St., Bainbridge, says: “I had a
dull pain in the small of my back
all the time. If I bent over, I
could hardly straighten, as the
pain was so fierce, I had frequent
headaches, dizzy spells and black
specks floated before my eyes.
The kidney seeretions were very
irregular in passage. One box of
Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured
at the Ehrlich Drug Co., relieved
me.”
Price 50c at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy
—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the
same kind that Mrs. Coper had.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N. Y.
Monthly Rates. $1.50 prompt
service. Julian Hodges. Pnone
S73.
SOFT DRINK FIGHT IS
BEFOREJIGISLATURE
Differs Entirely From Pre
vious Contests
There is areal big fight coming
on the soft drink business in
Georgia. Differing entirely from
all those things which have been
discussed in the past in the so-
called Coca-Cola fight, the legis
lation being framed will prohibit
the sale of certain soft drinks to
minors in Georgia.
The bill, which it is reliably
understood will be introduced in
the house of representatives this
week, is to be a very short, but a
very drastic, one, and there isn’t
room to doubt that, when it goes
before the body for action, it will
precipitate a legislative war
second hardly even to that of last
summer and fall.
The measure is being designed
—it is said already to have been
drawn—to make it unlawful for
any person, firm or corporation
to furnish any minor in the state
of Georgia any beverage contain
ing in any sense at all an opium,
coca leaves or any compound,
preparation or derivative made
from these, without first obtain
ing the “written consent of the
parent or guardian of such
minor.”
The act makes it a misdemean
or to violate its provisions, such
violation to be punished under
Section 1065 of the penal code.
The movement in behalf of the
passage of such a bill, it is stated
is being quietly handled, and the
intention has been that little or
nothing should be said of it until
the measure actually was intro
duced in the house.
This, it is stated, will be but
one of a series of two or three
similar measures; that a second
one will be virtually an exact
copy ot the federal Harrison anti
narcotic law, as it now stands,
except that the Georgia anti
narcotic under contemplation will
eliminate the exceptions made in
the proviso of the federal law.
That proviso, it is stated, permits
the sale of soft drinks contain
ing nar-cotics.
Ever Salivated by
Calomel? Horrible!
Calomel is quicksilver and
acts like dynamite
on your liver
Calomel loses you'a day! You
know what calomel is. It’s mer
cury; quicksilver. Calomel is
dangerous. It crashes into sour
bile like dynamite, cramping and
sickening you, Calomel attacks
the bones and should never be
taken into your system.
When you feel bilicus, sluggish
constipated and all knocked out
and believe you need a dose of
dangerous calomel just remember
that your druggist sells for 50
cents a large bottle of Dodson’s
Liver Tone, which is entirely
vegetable anl plesant to take
and is a perfect substitute for
calomel. It is gauranteed to start
your liver without stirring you
up inside, and can not salivate.
Don’t take calomel! It makes
you sick the next day; it loses
you a day,s work. Dodson’s
Liver Tone straightens you up
and you feel great. Give it to
the children because it is per
fectly harmless and does not
gripe.
WILL SLOANS LINIMENT REUEJE PAIN?
Try it and see—one applica
tion will prove more than a col
umn of claims. James S. Fergu
son, Phila., Pa. writes: “I have
had wonderful relief since I used
Sloan’s Liniment on my knees.
To think after all these years of
pain one application gave me re
lief. Many thanks for what your
remedy has done for me.” Don’t
keep on suffering, apply Sloan’s
Liniment where vdur pain is and
notice how quick you get relief.
Penetrates without rubbing. B«v
it at any Drugstore. 25c. (3)
You are hereby not]
the date for the exam
applicants for license tn
be held on Friday^.
August the 4th and 5th
^ public sebuol buildii
/ of Bainbridge. T.
mination will embrace!
lowing:
Primary and General
tary and High School anl
visory. Those teachers!
renew first grade!
granted in 1913 will tfl
following Reading Courl
ual of Methods for G|
Teachers, free: Cubbed]
al Life and Education, j
School Book Depository, i
Ga; Colgrove’s, The Teal
The School, Charles
Sons, Atlanta, Ga;
High School Adminil
Southern School Book!
tory, Atlanta, Ga.
The examination will
promptly at 8:30 a. m..
applicant will be admitti
9 o'clock. Pencils and]
will be free.
J. S. Bradwell,
Gall Stones, Cancer and!
of the Stomach and IntJ
Auto-Intoxication, YePo\v[
dice, Appendicitis and othl
ailments result from S
Trouble. Thousands of S
Sufferers owe their compl
covery to Mayr’s Woi
Remedy. Unlike any oth
Stomach Ailments. Fors
Druggists everywhere.
WH
Reac
are the
Forman Farm Loa
Ten years time, ant
instalments if desir
and reasonable ra
Write or see me for
formation.
K. G. Hartsfie
Bainbridge, Ga.
Constipation and Indigestion.
“I have used Chamber!
'ablets and must say that
re the best I have ever
or constipation and indigest
ly wife also used them fo
igestion and they did
ood,” writes Eugene S. Kni
Wilmington, N. C. Cham'
un,s Tablets are mild
entle in their action,
hem a tial. You are certair
e pleased with the a? ree '
ixative effect which thev
uce. Obtainable everywhere
SUGAR
ATTENTION
MERCHANTS!
t from
• e can
,'e ship
ah and
te us
-prised
, L. SMITH & c0
Fitzgerald. G®