The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, July 20, 1916, Image 2

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OBACCO JS PREPARED FOR SMOKERS UNpERTHE I PROCESS DISCOVERED IN I MAKING EXPERIMENTS TO {PRODUCE THE MOST, DE- LIGHtFUL AND WHOLE SOME TOBACCO FOR CIG- ETTE AND PIPE SMOKERSj. j, PROCESS PATENTED I UU.LY 30T? 1907 :■ U RJ.ReynoidsTobaccoCohpaxy WinstonSm.em.KC.USA. NOT BITE THE TONGUE - Prince Albert it told tOtrywhtrt in toppy rad bage, Sc: tidy red tint, 10c; handaome pound and half-pound Jin humidor* — and — that clever cryatal-giaaa pound humidor with aponge-moiatanar top that keepa the tobacco in euch aplendid condition. P. A. puts new joy into the sport of smoking! * Y OU may live to be 110 and never feel old enough to vote, but it’s cer tain-sure you’ll not know the joy and contentment of a friendly old jimmy pipe or a hand rolled cigarette unless you get on talking-terms with Prince Albert tobacco! P. A. comes to you with a real reason for all the goodness and satisfaction it offers. It is made by a patented process that removes bite and parch! You can smoke it long and hard without a come back ! Prince Albert has always been sold without coupons or premiums. We prefer to give qualityl Prince Albert affords the keenest pipe and cigarette enjoyment! And that flavor and fragrance and coolness is as good as that sounds. P.A. just answers the universal demand for tobacco without bite, parch or kick-back! Introduction to Prince Albert isn’t any harder than to walk into the nearest place that sells tobacco and ask for “a supply of P. A.” You pay out a little change, to be sure, but it’s the cheer- fullest investment you ever made 1 the national >rince±Albert R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Co., Win*ton-Salem, N. C. Copyright 1916 by R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Co. 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. G© 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 COLLEGE Cor Forsyth and Mitchell Sts. H. R. TODD, Supt. Atlanta, Ga. PROSPERITY We are still having plenty of rain. Quite a number of young peo ple enjoyed the Sing Sunday af ternoon at the home of Mr. and Mr*. F. P. Howell. The high waters of the past week has been quite an attrac tion for the people of this com munity. The marriage last Wednesday of Mr. Henry Palmer and Miss Mary Dollar was cjuite a surprise to their many friends. We wish them much happiness. Miss Birma Harrell gave Miss Jewel Brock a pop call Saturday afternoon. Miss Mary Dollar spent Satur day night and Sunday with Miss Sarah Brock. Miss Emma Lou Martin took dinner with Miss Jewel Brock Sunday. Misses Sarah and Leona Brock and Miss Mary Dollar went boat riding on the Slue Sunday morn ing and reported a nice time. Mr. Clarence Martin was up at the Sing Sunday afternoon. Miss Amelia Dollar is spend ing the week with her Uncle, Mr. Andrew Dollar. Mr. Joe Dollar and Mr. Kim ble Holby made a business trip to Bainbridge Saturday. Miss Evie Dollar visited her sister, Mrs. Lena Dean Saturday afternoon. Saturday afternoon, Mr. C. L. Martin made a busi ness trip to Bainbridge Satur day. Mr. Byron Belcher and family of near Whigham visited his sis ter, Mrs. Cora Dollar last Satur day and Sunday. Miss Bertha Dean and Mrs. Mattie Cause and David Dollar and J. H. Brock were out driving Monthly Rates. $1.50 prompt service. Julian Hodges. Phone S73. FOR GIRLS AND YOUNG WOMEN OSett fatil&e* foT Mumc, Art »nd Expression. The training of Teachers. Honetnakert and Reiipoua Workey t feature. Three modern buildings with gymnasium and laboratory for science. A real college home; Personal attention to every pupil: democratic student life and spiritual atmoaphere of highest type. Chargee reasonable. For full information addreas ANDREW COLLEGE, Cuthbert, Georgia Or. J. W. MALONE, President. Established IBS-4 REVENUES OF IDE GOVERNMENT ARE WISELY MANAGED The interest of people in public affairs is considerably heightened when they learn that the revenues of the Government are wisely and judiciously , managed. A statement of economical expendi ture which is susceptible of proof will always attract atten tion and please the thoughtful reader. Among the varied industrial enterprises of the Post Office Department in Washington is an establishment devoted entirely to the manufacture of mail locks and the bag attachments used in mail transportation. When this administration came into power, the Department sorely needed an improved type of mail lock. The shop was immediately reor ganized, placed on a business basis, and its activities enlarged so as to meet this imperative de mand. Within a very short time a new and greatly improved lock had been devised and its pro duction begun. The lock in use weighed 5 1-2 ounces; the new one weighs 2 4-5 ounces. As 430,000 ot this new product have been put into service, the difference in weight (the Government paying as much for the weight of equipment as it does for the mail itself) can be easily calculated. The locks re placed by this new and better style cost 21 cents each to make; those now being manufactured cost 81-2 cents, direct and in direct charges considered, the saving thus shown on original cost of production to date amounting to $53,750. Of the old style, 36,000 were annually returned for repair at a cost of about 9 cents each. Of the new style, lout of the great number sent into the service, but [906 have been returned, and as these new style locks can be repaired at a cost of 3 cents each, the annual saving on this item will amount to over $2,100. The Department has in this administration encouraged its employees to give their best service to the Government and many 'instances have recently come to notice wherein the De partment has greatly profited by this wise public. In the lock shop a recentl achievement in this direction is an improved cord fastener, the work of three of its employees, for use on bags; also one designed for locking large quantities of parcel-post matter, which has heretofore been without this protection. It can be made at a very low price, requiring less material and a fewer number of operations. The significant part of this lies in the great number required in the service, between three and four millions, the output being 500,000 annually. As the cost has been reduced by the new method 4 1-2 t« 3 cents each, it will be seen what a splendid showing this makes for administrative econ omy. Another valuable improvement has been the perfected locking cord fastener designed for use on tie sacks, something which the Department for years has needed and vainly endeavored to accomplish. This device will be of great value to the postal servie at large by increasing the capacity and efficiency of mail bags to a degree difficult to estimate. The modern system of business method's and the proper en couragement of employees to take an active and earnest in terest in their work, both of which desirable features this ad ministration of the Department has favored and put into practice, is responsible for the many im provements made and the ad- , vantages gained. I Active experiments are con stantly being made for the bet- 1 terment of the service. For many years a tremendous expense has been the labeling of the immense quanitv of mail bags in use. The form of label used in the past and still used by clerks all over the country is the doubling and refolding of what is known as a “facing slip.’’ The preparation of these labels by the thousands has been and is an expensive proposition, yet there appears to have been no effort on the part of previous administrations to progress from the old method. Under present direction a per forated label in sheets and runs has been designed which is practically ready for use when furnished to employees. Every postal clerk in the country and thousands of post-office employees will find this new method of great advantage and it will re sult in a large economy in the service. There have also been some other notable improvements made, viz., the substitution of steel where where brass was formerly used, at a very consider able lessening of expense; a device for fastening foreign mail pouches, doing away with the old-fashioned method of string and seal; a scheme for saving twine by means of a simple holder which permits free and easy use without waste, and a flexible stamp design, for which the contract price was 34 cents, but which will now be made at a cost of but 8 cents. A mechanical pickup or facing table for use in facing and stacking letters in first-class post offices has also been developed and will soon be perfected. This device is considered superior to those now in use and costs less than one-third as much to manufac ture. Those at present in use cost approximately $1,500. It will thus be seen that the activities of the Post Office De partment have been centered along lines which will not only produce large economies to the people of the country, but will also prove a great conven ience to those in the service. During the past three years two objects have been kept constant ly in view, viz.,[saving the public money wherever possible and serving the people to the fullest extent. There was room for great improvement and there has bee. much accomplished. It is but common justice to award due credit in these administrative reforms to the Fourth Assistant Postmaster »General, in whose Bureau these measures of econ omy were developed and who has so faithfully devoted his time to that purpose. Will My Child Take Dr. King’s New Discovery? The best answer is Dr. King’s New Discovery itself. It’s a pleasant sweet syrup, easy to take. It contains the medicines which years of experience have proven best for Coughs and Colds. Those who have used Dr. King’s New Discoveiy long est are its best friends. Besides every bottle is guaranteed. If you don’t get satisfaction you get your money back. Buy a bottle, use as directed. Keep what is left for Cough and cold and insurance. (1) Billionsness and Stomach Trouble. “Two years ago I suffered from frequent attacks of stomach trouble and biliousness,” writes Miss Emma Verbryke, Lima, Ohio. ‘‘I could eat very little food that agreed with me and I became so dizzy and sick at my stomach at times that I had to take hold of something to keep from falling. Seeing Chamberlain’s Tablets advertis ed 1 decided to try them. I im- proved rapidly.” Obtainable everywhere. FARMES—You can find Perry’s Swine Lixir, at my store and it is th« best hog medicine on the market. Now is the best time to begin its use. Jule Cliett, Water street, Bainbridge, Ga. I Mr. J. E. Drake, of Iron City, I was a business visitor here last Monday. You are herebv not! the date for the exam! applicants for license tot be held on Frida,- and! August the 4th and att the public schuol buildii city of Bainbridge, mination will embra lowing: Primary and Generali taryand High School a J visory. Those teachers to renew first grade granted in 1913 w nj j following Reading Co Ur J ual of Methods for g| Teachers, free: Cubberl? al Life and Education, j School Book Depository ■ Ga; Colgrove’s, The Tea] The School, Charles Sd Sons, Atlanta, Ga: Hd High School Adminil Southern School Book tory, Atlanta, Ga. The examination will promptly at 8:30 a. m . applicant will be admitted 9 o’clock. Pencils and will be free. J. S. Bradwell, MKoKB mmmmnsm Gall Stones, Cancer and of the Stomach and Inti Auto-Intoxication, Yellow dice, Appendicitis and oth< ailments result from S Trouble. Thousands of S Sufferers owe their comp covery to Mayr’s Wo Remedy. Unlike any ot Stomach Ailments. For Druggists everywhere. are the Forman Farm Loa Ten years time, anr instalments if desit and reasonable ra Write or see me for formation. R. G. Hartsfie Bainbridge, Ga. Constipation and Indigestion. “I have used Chamberl Tablets and must say that are the best I have ever for constipation and indiges My wife also used them fo digestion and they did good,” writes Eugene S. Kn Wilmington, N. C. Cham lam,s Tablets are mild gentle in their action, them a tial. You are certaii be pleased with the agree laxative effect which thev duce. Obtainable everywhei SUGAR ATTENTION MERCHANTS! Buy Sugar direct from sugar dealers. c * n save you money. Y e snip from both Savannah Brunswick. Write us ; and you will be surprise the saving you make. • • 8. L. SMITH* CO.