Newspaper Page Text
SIX
The Carpenters and Painters
STARTS TO REMODELING NEXT WEDNESDAY
So to Make Room for Them we Offer These Few Extra Specials
For Your Benefit as Well as to Clear Out Stock and Make Room
' DRESSES
91 LADIES’ DRESSE
of Figured Georgette, Taffeta, White
Georgette and Crepe de Chine to go at
just half price. Not one single dress re
served except 4 dark Tricolot dresses at
$45.00 Each
All the rest to go at one half price. Cash
none on approval or erchanged. This
may be the last dress sale, so come Mon
day at 9 o’clock A. M. and get your choice
of these dresses at
50 Per Cent. Off
None Altered :
A\ TSNS NN B THINS
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j Lime Cola gives you all you like in .
‘ the good ®la drink, plus the tonic
value and delicious flavor of pure
lime juice.
Cheering and refreshing, Lime Cola
contains exactly the right amount of
healthful lime juice to ~ive a pleasing
tang. Try it when thirsty or weary,
Lime Cola in sterilized IN
bottles reache! vou fresh
and pure. Ask for it BOTTLES
wherever rinks are served ON LY e
s~ 3LeA,7 T SR e P B A P e g eA TS
O DAR DU T T ELUECEER LD R L T T
We are always trying to make the Swimming Pool
a more enjoyable place. Try it if you are a skeptie.
It will eure you.
81 x 90 Sheets, eash ...+ 4i% 5‘;.-:. .’.51.69
81 x 90 Hemstitehed Shéets, each ..$1.95
Any Ladies Hat in Stock Monday and
Tuesday at
S5O Per Cent. Off
We must make room so come and buy
your hat at one half price. None sent on
approval or exchanged. Cash tc every
bedy. Just divide by two and you have
the price of any hat in this department.
Mens’ Bhirts. Any dress shirt in stock at
25 Per Cent. Off
z Where Your $ Does Full Duty
'DENY MISSIONARIES
CAUSED INSURRECTION
Ookio, June s.—4(Correspondence of
The Associated Pi'ess.)— Reports
that American missionlaries incited
the Korean insurrection are quite
incorrect accordipg to a statement of
K. Yoshizawa, counsellor of the
Japanese Foriegn office, who has re
turned after an investigiation of the
situation in Korea,
Speaking to Japanese newspaper
men Mr, Yoshizawa expressed the
view that the disturbances were the
outcome of a collision between the
oul-fashioned thought of the Tend
dokyo cult and the modern though
produced by the influence of Christian
ity. Mr. Yoshizawa continued.
“A lack of perfect understanding
between Japanese and Koreans is one
of the main causes of he disturbance,
but the principal causes that led to
the uprising is the discontent and
complaint in the mind of the Koreans
which suddenly burst out, prompted
by the new born thought kindled by
the prineiple of self-determination.
The simple and childish political
thought of the Korean people can he
well imagined from the fact that a
Marge number of Koreans came to
the government general at Seoul at
the time of the disturbance in
March and April and inquired of the
officials about ' the truth of the all
eged independence >f Kerea
* “How to sava the future of Korea
‘and Koreans is a arave guestion that
seriously taxes the brain of the
Japanese government.”
UNITED STATES TOOK
ALL LAST YEAR OIL OUTPUT
Mexico City, June 16.—The United
States took virtually all the 1918 oil
production of Mexico. about 7,500.-
000 tons, according to published sum
maries credited to the Department of
Industry, Commerce and Labor. To
Uncle Sam is credited exports of 6,
405, 731 tons, with England taking
134,184 tons and Chile leading South
American importers with 630,886 tons.
is heated electrically and the tem
doctor for infants needing such care
perature is kept even by a water jack
et.
THE CORDELE DISPATCH
LOWERED RESISTANCE
FAVORS OLD DISEASES
London, June 8. (Correspondence of
the Associated Press.)—“ln the con
dition of chaos in which Rastern
Eurcpe is at present, fanfine and fa
tigne have produced a condition of
lowered resistancé to infection which
favors the reproduction of the epi
demics of the Middle Ages,” says a
writer in the Lausanne (Switzerland)
Gazette.
“Prisoners are wandering in East
ern Europe on their way to their
homes, innumerable Russians on their
way to the East from Germany, Ger
mans, Austrians and Hungarians pass
ing from Russia to the West, Serba
and Croats striking South, Poles go
ing to the North, crossing one another
in indescribable confusion in Poland
the Ukraine and Hungary. The ab
sence of line and clothing forced these
prisoners to clothe themselves in rags
of skins in the same way as the eciv
ilian population.
“The fight againt tyvphus consists
mainly in bathing the men and steri
lizing their clothing. The Hungarians
possess oven, but no coal; the Czecho-
Slovaks have coal but no ovens. Soap
and body linen are absent everywhere.
Linen when put itno the oven is so
wretched as to be unwearable after
wards and the owner has to be sent
away clad in his shecpskin. Prison
ers and wandering civilians know this
so well that they take every means
to avoid disinfection more than any
thing else; to avoid being stoved at
a station they get out of the trains
when they stop at the smaller stations
and enter the town in small scattered
groups which atract less attention. |
“The ordinary mortality of exan
thematous typhus in endemic regions
before the war in Silesia, Poland, Rus
sia and Galicia was from 6 to 7 per
cent, at present it is iver 20 percent.
It is true that the epidemic has not yet
assumed the proportions of epidemic
cholera in India, where in the town of
Bombay alone there were 2,295 deaths
from January 12 to 25, 1919; but there
is a gerat danger for Europe. ey
PLOWING WITH WOODEN
HOOKS DRAWN BY OXEN
Rome, June 10.—Relics of Biblical
pastoral life, ploughing with wooden
hooks drawn by oxen, reaping by the
most primitive implements and other
occupations of the nomadic peoples
of antiquity remain the manner of
living today in Sardinia, according to
Dr. Alfred P. Dennis, commercial at
tache of the United States embassy
here, who has just returned from the
island after making an exhaustive
Study into the trade possibilities of it.
’
MEN’S STRAW HATS
Yes, Dandies at
50 Per Cent. Off
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
None Charged. Cash to all
Silk Special First Floor Where We Need
Room. _
36in Tezzo Silk, the yard ..........69
36in Taffeta at, the yard ..........$1:60
40in Crepe de Chine, the yard ... ...$1.85
40in Silk Georgette, the vard ......$1.85
Cotton Crepe at the yard ..........3(¢c
@9¢c Fiocuted Voile &t , ........... B 8
Join Bleactiihg ot ... .00 oo W
UNITED STATES FORGEIGN
TRADE SYSTEM OF BARTER
Rome, June 3.—(Correspondence
of The Associated Press.)—A system
of barter akin to that of pioneer
frontier days in America, but on
a more stupendous scale presents it
self as the modus operandi of the
foreign trade of the United States ini
Europe, according to foreign trade?
experts of the United States govern-i
ment investigating the trade pos
sibilities in Italy. ‘
“Our ability to establish per
manent trade relations with the
belligerent European nations which
have been drained of their resources
by war depends upon our wilingness to
accept a program of barter in the ex
change of commodities,” is the opinionl
given to the Associated Press Corres
pondent by Dr. Alfrede P. Dennis, Unit
ed States commercial attache here.
“Italy, he added, needs such ef our
raw materials as coal, iron ore and
petroleum procducts to cnable her to
start up her industrial processes and
begin anew her economic convales
cence. She cannot go on borrowing
the money to pay for our goocs. If
she is to have them it must be
throught swapping the money to pay
for our goods. If she is to have them
it must be through swapping her
commodities for our.”
“Sardinians present a living pic
ture of the remote past which has
been stereotyped and handed down
from antiquity,” said Dr. Dennis to|
The Associated Press correspondent
“Water-wheels with earthen buckets,,
wooden ploughs drawn by -oxen, the_
sceythe and the sickle still in use in|
reaping vast fields——nomadic oc-l
cupations unchanged since the days of'
Aryan dispersion—tribal costumes asl
gay and grotesque as the trappings ofi
the medieval pageant—all reproduce
in the veriest similitude the archaic
life of byegone ages.”
The left sides of the lenses of new
autbmobile goggles are c¢olored to en
able a driver to shield his eyes from‘
approaching glaring hreadlights by
turning his head slightly.
WASH SKISTS
A Special Reduetion of
25 Per Cent.
On any Wash Skirt in stock. They are
values to start with, but when you take
off
25 Per Cent.
vou have an extra value. :
Low Quarter Shoes at
25 Pct. Discount
9 x 12 Matting Rug, each .........$5.00
9 x 12 Axminister Rugs, each ....$25.00
| GRASS PROPOSED AS
l SUBSTITUTE IN PAPER
1 Mexico City, June 2.—Experiments
|conducted by the Department of
Agriculture have led to the announ
cement that zacation, a grass which
grows abundantly in various parts of
Excites the organs of taste and smell
These sensations, in turn, cause the .t
flow of gastric juices, thereby pro- o
ducing an appetite. :
Which illustrates the gegree to "‘ I
which science has played her part in \ LR
producing Schlitz Famo as a worth- i@
while cereal beverage. T
Besides inducing appetite, Schlitz Yy -
Famo supplies the body with every 47 ¢ B
compound that Nature utilizes to :
repair tissue, develop muscle and ‘i
restore energy. . “ Wi ;
Schlitz Famo is drink and food. |JEBSE=] =
Geod and good for you. It is non- =%o 7
satoxicating. A e
On sale wherever soft drinks %‘g
are sold. Order a case from
0 i W
3 i /| ;
Phone 127
-“ordele Produce €o
3. S & F. Track,
Cor. 13th Ave,
Cordele, Ga.
@
Made Milwaukee Famoys
MONDAY JULY 7, 1919
the republic, may be used in the
manufacture of paper. It is proposed
to use the grass as a substitute for
wood pulp. ‘ 5
Heaven will be a disappointment to
some of the very good when they find
it occupied by some who were not so
good. 3