Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Will Tell Chautauqua Audiences of His 125 Jobs
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ONEY FRED SWEET IN SOME OF HIS MANY JOBS.
Oney Fred Sweet, who wtil lecture
on the Redpnth Chautauqua this sea
son, is said to have worked at more
Jobs than any man who has ever lived.
During a period of three years he
tried out over 125 jobs. He tackled
everything from shoe shining to bank
ing. He went West and hired out as
a cowboy, he went Into the North
NEW RULES ISSUED
FOR USE OF SUGAR
ATLANTA. Ga.. May 17.—After May
15 no manufacturer using sugar for
manufacturing purposes will be per
mitted to purchase sugar without the
surrender of an authorized sugar dis
tribution certificate issued by the
State Food Administrator t the state
where the manufacturin concern is
located and endorsed on the ; by
the buyer.
All wholesale and retail gr vers in
Georgia are herby notified it they
must not sell, after May 15, to any
manufacturing concern using sugar
(see exceptions listed) unless the
manufacturer delivers the necessary
certificates These certificates will be
issuel and may be secured from the
Federal Food Administrator, 414
Chamber of Commerce building. At
lanta, Ga This new regulation of the
United States Food Administrator
will affect many industries in Geor
gia including all candy makers, soft
drink makers, soda fountains, etc.
To secure these certificates the
purchaser must make a sworn state
ment certifying that the amount of
sugar to be purchased will not give the
buyer more than his fair share of the
<sugar then available for distribution.
Certificates will be issued in the fol
lowing denominations: 50 pounds. 100
pounds. 500 pounds, 1,000 pounds, 5.000
pounds, 10,000 pounds, and 60,000
pounds.
Certificates will be issued from May
loth to July Ist in accordance with
the following percentages cf the
amount users are entitled to as shown
by statements filed with the Federal
Food Administrator
The following are entitled to 100
per cent of the amount of sugar used
in the same period of 1917:
Preservers and packers of veget
ables. catsup and Chili sauce, fruit
and milk. Manufacturers of jam
jelly and preserves, meat packers, ice
cream F’anufacturers. (excluding ser
| Relief from Eczema |
Don't worry about eczema or other
skin troubles. You can have a clear,
healthy skin by using a little zemo,
obtained at any drug store for 35c, or
extra large bottle at SI.OO.
Zemo generally removes pimples, black
heads, blotches, eczema, and ringworm
and makes the skin clear and healthy.
Zemo is a clean, penetrating; antiseptic
liquid, neither sticky dot greasy and stains
nothing. It is easily applied and costs a
mere trifle for each application. It te
always dependable.
* The E. W.
woods as a lumberjack. He was a
gypsy, a trapeze performer. He was a
Pullman p»orter, a railroad fireman, a
dog catcher, a marriage license clerk,
a detective, an animal trainer, a bell
boy. a steeplejack and a flat janitor.
He hankered to live the other fellow's
life. He will tell of these experiences
tn his forthcoming lecture here.
'Tens and water ices)' druggists for;
metli al purposes only, tobacco and
explosive manufacturers, manufactur
ers of apple butter, honey producers
glycerine manufacturers.
I The following are not entitled to
more than 80' of the sugar used dur
ing the same period of 1917:
Condiment manufacturers, manufac
t -ers of soda water, manufacturers of
confecti aery, candies and chocolate. J
manufacturers of soft drinks and
l ev. rage syrups, bottlers of soft
drinks, fruit syrup and flavoring ex
eact annfacturers, manufacturers of
-w i pickles, chewing gum manufac
turer. c, oa manufacturers, manufac
turers of invert sugar, wine and cer
ed manufacturers, all others, soda
I water fountains and sellers of soft
1 drinks.
I The following are not entitled to
Ins l sugar:
I Leather tanners, manufacturers of
inon-edible products
I These rules and regulations Shall
! not apply to shipments or deliveries
on bona fide contracts enforceable at
law, made prior to May 15, 1918; nor
I shall they apply to sales or deliveries
| to hotels, restaurants, boarding houses
lor other public eating places whose
I products are sold for consumption on
, the premises nor to wholesalers or
jietailers in sugar holding a license
from the United States Food Admin
jistratlon, nor to bakeries and cracker
manufacturers holding a license un
der the United States Food Admin
istration.
The wholesaler or retailer shall
cancel immediately upon receipt and
mail on the first of each month to the
Federal Food Administrator whose
name is signed thereto, all sugar cer
tificates received by him during the
preceeding month.
ANDREW M. SOULE,
Federal Food Administrator for Ga.
♦ ♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ GARDEN SASS. ♦
I cannot join the army, for the army
told me so,
Xad lots of men are heavier an’
wiser
Put i m ready for all comers with a
garden rake an' hoe.
And I'm raisin' peas an’ beans to
beat the Kaiser!
Th© navy doesn't want me messin*
up a pretty deck.
They've chased me out of each re
cruitin' station,
But me an - Herbie Hoover's gonta
win the war. by heck,
An' I've got the finest garden in
the nation!
AMERICUS TIMES-RECOXDER.
“I am not at all soured as the result
of my three years'' experience," he
says, “but 1 don't envy the other fellow
quite as much as I used to. He has
troubles of his owu. I realize now
-what a tragedy It is to be unprepared
to do any one thing well, and I realize
what a king the man Is who really has
the goods."
WAS TIME TO LAUGH
AND OUR TROOPS DID
I
; WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN
FRANCE, May 17. —How an American
alarm clock kept the whole German
' line guessing and caused the Germans
' useless expenditure of large quanti
fies of machine gun and rifle ammu
rition all one night was related to-
Iday
j The Americans had been trying for
’seme me to draw the tire of certain
| enemy units.
"Leave Fritz to me,” said a happy
faced young American, who, putting an
I alarm clock under his atm, disap
i peared into no man's land under cover
of darkness and fastened the clock to
I a wire.
Soon the alarm rang, whereupon
j the Germans opened fire. The wire
; had been so arranged that clock con
| tinned to ring intermittently, and each
time drew a violent fire from the en-
J emy. Meanwhile the Americans rest
ed in their trenches, and laughed and
lauched. 1 f
I
w 'HEM
DurtNjj t)i9 peruni cf tin W<tr. ir* will wot wTI
un Xnurriean M Howel Mill «t*
pNrp<-y« w to gvpp<y the local of a commu
i.itif, i r our icithjiaurandfftd.
DO YOUR BIT. Help the Gov
ernment by saving the freight
on wheat and flour. Relieve the rail
roads of this unnecessary congestion t>y
> establishing in your community one of
these wonderful American Midget Mar
vel Roller Flour Mills.
And Make Money,Too
1150 to SI,OOO per month can be made
with this permanent, substantial and
dignified business.
This wonderful self-contained roller
mill is revolutionising milling. Makes
splendid flour at a better yield than the
Government requires. One man without
previous milling experience can run it
successfully. Small cost, small power,
easy operation enables It to make a
• Better Barre! of Flour Cheaper." You
can sack your flour under our nationally
advertised brand "FLaxo.”
Our Service De part-
Sment Inspects your prod
ucts each month free
and keeps you up to
cuaNty. Sites of mills
from 15 to IM barrels
per day. You can start
with ths small site If
you bars $5,609 to in
vest. Sold on $0 days'
«rp«r.csMkeß <rf ow»-
Aatb M Ca.
lTrwt.BW.
Qwsaabsrs. Ky. (S®
MIW RESORTS
TO BIGGER U-BOATS
AS TOTAL OF HER SUBMARINES
DWINDLES, SHE PUTS OUT MOKE
FORMIDABLE TYPE, FRENCH
MINISTER OF MARINE WARNS.
PARIS, May 17.—The steady de
cline of German submarine effective
ness and the fact that the German
government is aware of and is con
cealing this by grossly exaggerated
figures on sinkings, were illustrated
before the Naval Committee of the
Chamber of Deputies by George Ley
gues, Minister of Marine, who produc
ed tabulated records to show that the
actual losses for April 1918 were only
268,704 tons, the smallest monthly loss
for a year.
| Mr, Leygues declared, however, that
the Germans were bringing out a new
and more formidable type of subma
rine. and because of this the Allies
must continue their vigorous cam
paign "until we have cleaned up the
the sea as one cleans up a trench. The
enemy is trying a fresh offensive in
which it plays for his last stake.”
I M. Leygues gave the following
comparative table of tonnage actually
lost and that claimed by Germany to
have been destroyed in the last five
months.
Claimed by Actual
Germany. Losses.
Tons. Tons.
December. 1917.... 702,000 386.277
January, 1918 632.000 302.459
February, 1918, .... 689.000 332 T-2
March, 1918 680.000 358 660
April, 1918 600.000 268,7u4
! The nriutter asserted that ine
numr-er o' V boats sunk in the first
three months of 1918 was greater than
the number built.
{ Referring to Vice Amiral Capelle s
(German Minister of Marine) state
ment in the Reichstag on April 1.
that 600,000 ton of allied shiping were
sunk monthly, he said these figures
declined in April 1917, and in Novem
ber fell below 400,000. Since then they
have diminished continuously.
j In February, March and April, ac
cording to Mr. Leygues, 3,723 French
steamers and 788 French sailing ves
sels passed through the danger zone
and not a single ship was sunk. On
the other hand, the destruction of V
boats was s o great that the effective
ness of enemy squadrons cannot be
maintained at the minimum re-yjire-f
by regulations.
! These results , the minister s: .re:
ited tc the close co-ordinatcr :>F ic
allied navies, the intrepid:.;
cers and crews of naval arc ser_£'.
squardons, to the intensified use :f : :
methods and the enploymert cf rev
oner
I
I
CHICHESTER S PILLS
B' THS DIAMOND BBJLSB. A
ladles! Ask your &r /* \
Chi-rhe*-ter »
Pills in Ked and trnld
botes, c *aled E._« Mxcca. \/
Tnkr on otb<r. Soy ywr v
Hi. j'c•• k Hl-4 £
DLA**O-Vr KRAXD PILL.*, I* £5
yesrr ■ .* Saacrt.AJw** -LeLt? «e
OiD/
BECOMES 1
■SOFT, SILKY, LONG r\>|
■like picture (from an
I" actual photograph) M
HEROLIN XB£l|
Pomade Hair Dressing. Vwy * ®
This elegant Hair Po- “pi -
made makes stubborn,
coarse, wiry or kinky hair soft, silky,
fluffy, long and pretty, so you can do
up your hair in any style. Also stops
dandruff and falling hair/ and grows
lots of new hair soft and beautiful
to behold. Herolin is not sticky or
gummy. SEND 85e (stamps or cola)
5 for a box. Also sold by drug stores.
| HEROLIN MED. CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
g .Agents wanted. Write for terms.
lsorif'sn£
Before applying powder—give your
skin a protecting coat of
MARIN E L L O
Motor Cream
Shields skin against wind and w’eather.
Prevents tan and sunburn. Keeps skin soft
and velvety. El-inmates ctnue of most com
plexion defects. Absolutely essential to
proper care cf facia! beauty. Try it.
For sale by Mrs. Garner's Hair
dressing parlors.
Bracing as a
K XlNorth Wind
Ja the end of a hard ‘ky* j ust sit
down to a cup of Luzianne
Coffee. See how you pick up with
every savory sip. Luzianne is far, far
different from any other coffee. It’s
,„ ■ -r got something that all the others seem
In7l AN Mfr t 0 lack ' And it s packed in dust -P ro °f>
moisture-proof cans that bring
I Luzianne to your kitchen just the same
aswhenifleftther ° aster# Buyacan
i and tr y for y° urself ’ An iron-clad,
Jjp I air-tight guarantee says that if you are
. d coffef I not entirely satisfied with Luzianne,
your grocer will give you back your
money. And he will
1 [B^IANNW^oi i ee ■
(( When It Pours, It Reigns”
2inl
SHOE
Wf KEEP YOUR SHOES
I |/bl UQUIDS AND PASTES. FOR BLACK, WHITE, /‘.lf I /
I TAN, DARK BROWN OR OX-BLOOD SHOES. | A (
I .Hll. PRESERVE THE LEATHER. E/ VJ
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CLAUDE MAUK & CO.
Have opened up at Stanley’s old place, on Jefferson
Street, rear of Chero-Cola Co., and want to do your
Automobile Repair Work
When you have any troubles with your car phone 41.
Mauck will give you prompt service and
Guarantee Satisfaction
MITCHELL "SIX”
A Better Car lor Lei s Money
Economical, Dependable
Durable
A Car, 95 per cent of which is
built in the Mitchell factory
THIS MEANS A CAR
Reasonable in price with each part
built from the very best material
at big labor-saving.
Made strong, for service; designed
for comfort; equipped with every
convenience; fully gauranteed.
Plains Auto Co.
209 Lamar Street
READ THE WANT ADVERTISEMENTS
FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1918.