About Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1923)
PAGE TWO L THE TIMES-RECORDER DAILY STORY WSPublished in Installments of Two Columns Each. Copies of Back B g; . Installment Available On Application at This Office. tjr .7 ■■ —— —■ ■ ■ , .. ■ ai. M u>n&»k w-in AUvi,4ieo r..». .national . -Ficturea. Inc. Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattlany. A mc~ C«»»rtaht ISIS by Oortru4« Albertos ____J XXIX (Continued) .ceiqented many friendships, I cultivated a cynical philoso- ■ phy— for my own private suc . cor—and although, for a time. there were moments of bewildered " groping and of intense rebellion, s ,,.pr a sudden and hideous sense of inferiority, I twisted the necks of those noxious weeds thrusting themselves upward into my con . sciousness and threatening to ; strangle it, and trampled them un der the heel of my will. It was by no means the least happy interval of my life, for I was very healthy, I took a great deal of outdoor ex ercise, and there was a sense of freedom I never had experienced .before. Love is slavery, and I was no longer a slave. "After my husband's d'oath, i-- I told you, I opened the Zattlany ' palace In Vienna once more (my nephew and his wife preferred Paris, and I leased it from them), expecting to follow the life 1 hail rijapped out, until I was too old for interests of any sort. I had a bril .. liant salon and I was something of ' a political power. Os course, I knew - that the war was coming ■ long before hatreds and ambitions reached their climax, and advised this man of whom I have spoken, Mathilde Loyos, and other friends, to Invest large sums of money in the ' United States. Judge Trent ar ranged the trusteeship in each ease ” “Where is this man?’’ “■ “I do not know. He wont down with the old regime, of course, and ■woitld be a pauper but for these Ahterlcan investments and a small ’ ambunt in Switzerland, He lias oc ' ‘ copied no position in the new Gov ernment* although he was a L'b oral in politics. What he Is doing ~ I have no idea. I hare not seen him for years." “Well—go on." 1,,; "It. was only when I Ir'came ji.waro of a growing mental I '-od- -■) .tnde, a constant sense of effort, ih talking everlastingly on snbj< ■:< , .nt’.at called tor constant siorim-ss rand' often reorientation, that I was ■ renlhF aghast and bega t to look ■Howard the future not only with a sense of helplessness but of intol ' erab’e weariness. I used to feet an inclination to turn rnv head away with an actual physical c< turn when concentration was !•>> > “iterative. 1 thought that my comb "'iriop was psychological, that I had ’ lived too much and ton ’’••rd tl ■•/'mv memory was overburdened -ml ■ my • wipe of the futility and mm a ' tagli usness of life too overwhelm •'inc Uut I know now that the <-oti» ditibn was physical, the result of' ~...1he degeneration of certain cells “I spent the summer alone ,m my estate in Hungary, ami when It •as over I determined to close ; the palace in Vienna ami remain in the country. 1 could not go back to that restless high-pitched life, with its ceaseless gaiety on ‘ the one hand and its feverish puli tics and portentous rumblings on the other. My tired mind rebelled ■ And the long strain had told on my health. ."I Jived an almost completely outdoor-life, riding, walking, swim . niiqg In the lake, hunting, but careful not to overtax my return ing strength. I was not in love with life, far from it! But I had no intention of adding invalidism to my other disintegrations In the .evening 1 played cards with ‘ my secretary or practised at the piano, with some revival of my old interest In music. 1 read little, even in the newspapers. 1 was become, * save perhaps for by music, an automaton. But,’ •!- though I did not improve in ap pearance, my health was complete- - ly restored, and when the war came I was in perfect condition -for the arduous task I immediately undertook. Moreover, my mind, terpid for a year, was free and re freshed for those practical details it must grapple with at once. I turned the Zattiany palace in Buda Pesth into a hospital. And then for four years I was again an automaton, but this time a neces sary and useful one. When I thought about myself at all, it i seemed to me that this selfless and ] strenuous interval was the final i severance from my old life. If Society In Europe today we'e .miraculously restored to its pre- [ war brilliancy—indifferent to little I but excitement and pleasure— there would be nothing in it for me. “Now I come to the miracle.” And while she recapitulated what she had told the women at Mrs. Oglethorpe’s luncheon, Clavering listened without chaos in his ac companying thoughts. "Certainly, man's span is too brief now,” she concluded. “He withers and dies at an age when, if he has lived sanely—and when a man abuses his natural functions he generally dies before old age, anyhow—he is beginning to see life as a whole, with that* detachment that comes when his personal hold on life and affairs is relaxing, when he has realized his mistakes, and has at tained a mental and moral orlenta pou which could be of Inestimable service to his fellow ni't,' imi to civilization in general. What you call crankiness in <>;<! so trying to the younger generations, does not arise from natural tune fulness of disposition a:-' a re leased ' congenital seltisbn.-ss iitr from atrophying glands and. no doubt, a subtle rebellion i.;nnsl nature for consigning men, <- m eptitude when they should be . a tering upon then lest pw.od <>l usefulness, and philosophical as 'veil as active enjoyment of life. "Science has defeated nature at many points. The isolation, >1 germs, the discovery of toxins am! serums, ihe triumph over diseases that once wa led wliob nationsand brought about the fall of empires the arrest of infant mortality, th' marvels of vivisection and surgery —the lisi is o-ridle-ss It is i-ntirel.' logical, anil ho more marvellous that science should be able to ar rest senescence, put back the clock ii H II w 'I -v_- ® i i “‘I have no fear that you will not keep your promise.' ” The wonder is that it lias not been done before." .She rose, still looking down at the lire, which Clavering had re plenished twice. “| am going now. And 1 have no fear -tint' you will t.ot keep your promise! But remem ber th y when thinking it over: 1 do not merely look young aataln, I am young. I am not the years 1 have passed in this world, I am the 1,1 Ibe rejuvenated glands in my body, Some day we shall have the proverb. ‘A man is as old as •his cndmiriiii s.’ Os cuur.e I can not have children. The treatment •is 'identical with that for steriliza tion. This consideration may in lluence inn 1 shall use no argu nienis nor seductions. You will have decided upon’ all that before we meet again. Good night. ' And “he was. gene. XXX It seemed to Clavering that he had run the gamut >f the emotions while li ten.ng to that brief biog raphy, so sterilely told. L it there had also been times when he had felt as if suspended in a void even while visited by flashes of acute consciousness that he v.-.i • being called upon to know himself for the first lime in his life. And in sneh fashion as no man had ever been called upon to know himself before. - There was no precedent in life or in fiction to guide him, and he had realized with a sensation of panic even while she talked that it was doubtful if any one had ever understood himself since the dawn of time. Man had certain stand ards, fixed beliefs, Ideals, above all, habits —how often they scattered to the winds under some unheralded or teratogenic stress. He had seen it more than once, and not only in war. Every man had at least two personalities that he was aware of, end he dimly guessed at others. Some were frank enough to admit that they had not an idea what they would do in a totally unfamiliar sit | nation, ('layering had sometimes | emblemized man and his personali | ties with the old game of the ivory egg. A twist and the outer egg re | vealed an inner. Another and one i beheld a third. And so on to the | inner unmanipulatable sphere, which might stand for the always i inscrutable soul. Like all intelli i gent men, he had a fair knowledge of these two outer layers of per sonality, and he had sometimes had a flashing glimpse of others, too elusive to seize and put under the microscopic eye of the mind. What did he know of himself? He asked the question again as he I sat in his own deep chair in the ' early morning hours. The heat in ; the hotel had been turned off and i he had lit the gas logs in the grate j —symbol of the artificialities of civ ilization that had played their in | sidious role in man's outer and I more familiar personality. Perhaps i they struck deeper. Habit more , often than not dominated rlginal Impulse. ,(1» Be Continued) STUDENT HONOR ROLL [FOP, BETO IS 001 Large List of Ame.icus’ Best Students Published By School Officials Honor sthdents of the Americus school system f>r the month of November have been selected and publication of toe names ol those winning places on the coveted hon or roll has been authorized. Pupils making an average of 05 or over are entitled to b* recog nized by having their names appear ou the honor roll of the schools. The following is the official list: East Americus School First Grade- James Franklin Morris, Vivian. Grilfin, Eva Murr, William Evans Smith. Second Grade Thomas Hunni cutt, Sara Archer, Sarah Camerfli), Glennis Collins, Elizabeth Pouncey. Third Grade—Ruby Tallent, Ed win Jones, James Holley, Montine Summers, Jack Prance. Fourth Grade Annie Mae Brown, Martha Johnson. Fifth Grade Sarah Neal Mad dux, Nellie Oliver, Ruby Powell, Christine Schneider, Willie Maude Johnson, Virginia Goodman, Corlie Fullbright. Furlow School First Grade Dora Gwynes, Jen nette Kiel, Lucile McDowell, Wal ter Bostwick, Meriwether Jones, Frank McLain, Heys McMath, Clarke Poole, Hits Sheppard. Sec tion Two—Herschel Argo, Jr., Billy Boyd, Samuel Hamrick, Herbert Humber, Thelma Baker, Cecil Rob erts, Theresa Clore, Caroly Crock ett, Dorothy English, Mildred Hol loway, Clara Belle 116'oks, Virginia Jackson, Frances Pittman, Harriet Robertson, Annie Suliba, Evelyn Suggs. Second Grade, Section I.—J. C. Arrington, Kendall Beavers, Walter kletcher, A. t . Guy, Jr., Vernie Holloway, Cecil Hudson, Earl Jack son, Ned Kiker, Grover Scott, Jr., Dorothly Calkley, Elizabeth Gard ner, Christine Holbrook, Elizabeth Langford, Ruth Mathews, Hazel Olt ver, Beatrice Parker, Ada Beil Sieg, Annie Claire Slappey, Ida Mae Ty son. Section Two. Wingate Dykes, Augustus Harris, Charles Hale,'Wil liam Purvis, John Edgar Shipp, Jr., Gladys Adkins, Beatrice Batinsen, Lamartine Christine, Eula Felton Council, Katherine Dixon, Azilee Escoe, Mary Hogg, Catherine John son Frances McDonald, Frances linker, Rosalie Purvis, Elizabeth sneppard, Mary Vi Speer, Ruby lerry, Alice Waller, Jessie Wil liams. Third Grade, Section I—Charles Hudson, Jr., E. J. Hughes, George Kenmore, Carl R ya i s , Tommie Warren, Frances Capieh, Annie Lu cile bay, Amelia Jones, Nettie Poole. Section Two—Joe Boswell, ■lames Deavours, Robert House’ Henry Hyatt, Gerald Jackson, Clar ence Niblack, Verna Dean Adkins, Lizzie Collum, Marie Purvis, Mae' Rose Banders. , bourth Grade, Section One Jack Bell, Argle Crockett, Winston ilubbard, Henry Speer, Mary Eliza beth Ames, I'Anily Bartlette, Lou isa Cargill, Edith Escoe, Catherine Guy, Margaret Harrell, Margaret Hooks, Mary Walker. Section Two -Dorothy Bradford Flora Duncan, Ruth Laney, Mary Ruth McLeod, Marian I’illman, Julian Gammage, Willis Shiver, Horace Thayer. Sec tion 1 hree—Lillian Pouncey, La vinia Odom, Etta Jarvis, Christine Covington, Oscar Bell, Chester Fea gin, George Bradford, Harry Mc- Gowan. Fifth Grade, Section One—Laura Andrews, R u ,by Horne, Sa iah shipp. Marvin Ken more. Section Two— Monteen Pierce, Elizabeth English, Miriam I layer, Herbert Banks. Sixth Grade, Section One—lxt and Bell, Dean Turpin, Elizabeth Broadhurst, Annie Tallent. Section Iwo—Arm Johnson, Mary Graham, Haz-el Council, Jim Harris. Section Three—Joe Horne, Lucius MeCles key, Hildreth Castleberry. Seventh Grade, Section One Emma Kate Hyatt, Martha Wall, Kosa Ratley, Mildred LeMaster, Inez : Law, Charles Vaughn, Mike Smith. Section Two— Clarence Ames, Emory Witt, tf>na Bell, Le Dora Burton, Thelma Guy, Grace “tnian, blorrie Warren, Virginia . ?Section Three—Robert English, William Tye, Florence Pel ham, bhiith Carney, Mary Eva Cain- Mome ,l,, ' a M ° rrell, Harriet te Prospect Heighs School H<rl" S L Ch “’’les Holliday-, Hilbert Sahba, Forrest Phillips Eevond Grade— Alvin Hall Hah'T d r Gl ? de ’ B ° n Hall > Fate J. C. Logan. COLUMBUS YOUTHS FACE MURDER TRIAL TUESDAY COLUMBUS, Dec. 13.—Willie Jones and Garvis Bloodworth, charged with the murder of How m i A ’ l ’ n(lerw ood, salesman, in laylor county, will .be placed on trial in Taylor Superior court next 1 uesday, it was announced Wed nesday. Ihe two youth are in the county jail here pending the trial. Sure Relief FOR SICK BAB/ES LIQUID-NO OPIATES For Boweland Teethinc Troubles, Constipation Colic, Sour Stomach. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS BABY EASE THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER Oh, Girls! ■. v ■ 7 — 7 S - * * B Ci-3 I L»lK‘ \ * JSsS&v- - '-Fl - ' I r ft JI W® j J i fl v' \ f \ -9 J Winter’s winds are screeching across the northern states. And in some of ’em the snowdrifts are beginning to pile up. But down in Florida, society is on its an nual trek. Just witness this — Gwendolyn (Billie) ancelot (standing) and Lillian R. Simp son, pretty Philadelphia maidens, enjoying a swing—-no, not -a swim—on the peach at St. Peters burg. SECOND MONROE CONVICT CAPTURED AFTER ESCAPE FORSYTH, Dee. 13. - Clyde Garrett, the second of the trio made their escape from the county stock ade Sunday night was captured Tuesday night at the home of a relative in the city. It w;as errone ously repQi'ted that the other con vict who escaped was Jeff Hand, but it was Luther Gloeh, of Atlanta, who has more than one case against him, one or more for larceny, Glo er is said to be a “dope” addict and is about 30 years of age. He still is at large. Once before he sawed out of the county jail here, and while waiting for his trial at the recent session of the Superior court he and a "pal” slid down a canvas rope from the second story of the court house here, both be ing captured a few minutes later. Sunday he was very "sick,” arous ing the'sympathy of the chaingang officials. The doctor visited him twice, but between the doctor’s visits he bored with a vim through the floor with an auger, liberating himself and two others, Jayce Mul lis and Gloer. QUITMAN PREPARES TO RAISE MORE OF WEED QUITMAN, Dec. 13,—-Georgia tobacco will command good prices again next season in the opinion of those who have studied the out look. It is declared that the Caro linas will plant much next year as the result of the high prices that staple is bringing and that as a result they will sharply reduce their tobacco acreage. It is said that now is the time to make preparations for tobacco beds. Growers are told that they should pick out good rich place neither too high nor too low, for this purpose. The beds should be planted next week. It takes a bed oi 30 square yards to furnish plants for one acre, demonstrators state. Arrangements for fertilizer and cloth have been made by the pro moters of the tobacco crop here. I hey urge all prospective growers to keep in touch with the demon strators at this time to avoid pos sible mistakes. A new material, hiavolette, is used by a German inventor in the manufacture oi safety razors. It looks like ivory, tortoise shell or marble, depending on the manner in which it is manufactured. THERMOS and FERROSf AT BOTTLES Make Useful Gifts -We Have Them Very Attractive XMAS BOX STATIONERY Prices From 50c to $5.00 NATHAN MURRAY DRUGGIST 120 Forsyth St. Phone 79 .AIR TRAFFIC COHTROL FAVORER IH PJWIT Commerce Secretary Favors Re vision of Navigation Laws To Meet Inc, eased Travel WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Leg islation for the revision >f the navi gation laws, for control of traffic in the air, and for stabilization c.t radio were among the recommenda tion made by Secretary Hoover tn the annual report of the Commerce Department. The rapid growth oi aircraft and radio transmission •dike, he said, had created a nee<: for administration development, while the navigation laws, long un der scrutiny, required adjustment to the increased commercial expan sion. Within the department itself, Mr. Hoover recommended that congress follow the general reorganization plan under the Harding admtnis ! tration, and make three administra tive groupings to deal Respectively with industry, trade, and naviga tion. He likewise urged congres sional affirmation for the acts by ? which President Harding created I Alaskan fisheries reserves, and sug- I gested relief from federal taxation I for American residents abroad and 1 engaged in furthering American I commerce. Much of the report dealt with the special enterprise, in which the com merce department has engaged dur ing the year, designed to standardize commodity and material specifica tions, to collect facts about world agricultural production, and to de termine the character of organiza tion abroad by which it has bejsn charged that American consumers have been threatened with uriduly high prices. "Through the huge export bal ances of the last few years, we have shifted from a debtor to a creditor nation,” said Mr. Hoover, ‘‘and the theory is now more or less general ly accepted that our hitherto nor mal excess of exports over imports njust ultimately shift to an excess of imports, as we have large bal ances to receive in payment of in terest. The gradual reduction of the monthly report excess in 1922, culminating in the spring of 1923 in four consecutive months in which imports were larger than exports, does not necessiarly mean that this time has arrived. “The situation in most branches of agriculture,” ho continued, “seems to be gradually adjusting itself. The partial recovery in foreign demand for cotton has per mitted a higher price forth? crop of 1923 than fbr that of 19 : 22; in spite of an increase of 14 per cent in acreage and an appreciable in crease in production. While the prices of hogs have been somewhat lower of late, the relatively high prices of corn, which is chiefly fed to livestock, seem to indicate con fidence of cattle and hog raisers in the future. Teh dairy industry in general is prospering, the de mand for dairy products varying more than that for most other agri cultural products with general movements of prosperity and de pression in industry. As for wheat, which is more dependent an foreign markets than any other agricultural product and which is subject tc greatly increased competition from Canada and other foreign countrie it seems necessary gradually to re duce acreage.” The banking situation, Mr. Hoov er said, was “essentially sound” at the end of the fiscal year, and the continued flow of gold into the i mted States had kept reserve bank stocks at a high proportion to cir culating money. Loans of Ameri can capital abroad dwindled. For eign capital issues in the United 30 dte ioo-V ri ? g ' the . y ear ending June 4 ’a-..,,- 0 ’ he estimated to amount O /V 9 '+’’ (,<)0 ’ 000 . while in 1921 the 000 000. su '° ans had been ? 932 >- In the American security invest ments abroad during the last year, -ir. Hoover pointed out, Latin Ob' 1 takln «' $142,000,000 Can ssß 00°0 nnn OUt $lO9 ' 000 >000, while 845 000 00 ) Y en „ t 0 about s4l 00 00 t a C Far East ’ ail(I lion' ’ American posses- LV ONS STORAGE PLANT PACKING MUCH MEAT LYONS, Dee. 13.—The cold stor age department of the Lyons ice and cold storage plant is rapidly tilling with meat brought fn by fanners. At present, 20,000 pounds are being cured, of whien 6,000 pounds came in one day. Some of the first pieces brought in at the beginning of the season has been taken home bv the owners for their home use or for smoking and hang ing up. This plant has a dry cure method which is much more effi cient than the old method, which kept much moisture in the curing room. MOTHERS— Why allow ‘'snuffles” and stuffy, wheezy breathing to torment your Babies when quick relief follows the use of CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH REMEDY No Narcotic* ATLANTA FIREMEN, COPS ASSURED OF WAGE HIKE! ATLANTA, Dec. 13.—Pay in creases of $lO for all privates and $5 to 810 for all other members of the city fire and police depart ments were declared to be assured for next year as a result of con ferences held Wednesday by mem bers of the salary committee of council with‘Mayor Walter A. Sims. Councilman C. J. Vaughan, chair man, has called the committee to meet again Friday afternoon and a schedule of raises will be intro duced then, supported by Dr. Vaughan, Council J. L. Wells ami Alderman I. N. Ragsdale, which will meet Mayor. Sims’ approval. 11. S. IMPORTS HUGE ■Bll 1 CHINESE EGGS ATLANTA, Dec. 1 , —Annual irn-i ports of Chinese eggs into the Unit-1 ed States are more than offset by | exports of American eggs, t accord-1 ing to the United States ' Depart- i ment of Agriculture. Moreover, the j imported eggs are mainly dried and j frozen eggs used by the larger; bakeries, confectioners, and other wholesale consumers, whereas I American exports are principally I shell eggs. I Total imports of the dried and i frozen eggs during the ten months I ending October 1923, were fifteen I million pounds as compared with eighteen million pounds imported during the corresponding period of 1922. Practically all imports of eggs came from China. Os total imports during the period covered 9,4(10,000 pounds of frozen eggs, and 1,600,000 pounds of dried eggs or about 74 per cent were contain ed in a single cargo that arrived tn New York from China the lat ter part of August. There were also improted during the ten months period 334,.000 dozen of eggs in the shell as compared with 924,000 dozens imported during the corre sponding period in 1922. Domestic exports of eggs consist almost entirely of eggs i nthe shell, the department says. Exports of shell eggs during the ten month® ending October 1923, were twenty four million dozens valued at 86.- I •>OO,OOO as compared with 27,000,- 000 dozen valued at .$7,000,000 ex ported during the corresponding pe riod of 1922. The principal ex ports market for American eggs are ( üba, Canada, Mexico, and the timted Kingdom. The quantities exporcia to each of these countries dining the period covered were J Cuba ten million dozens; Cana'ila five, million five hundred thousand j dozens; Mexico million five hundred thousand dozens; and the United Kingdom two million dozens. disease cure fluid DISCOVERY IS CLAIMED NEW YORkTdTc. ery oi a fluid for injection into 1 the arteries, v. hereby white corpus cles are strengthened and multiplied lor the hflttle against disease or in-I H'.ction, was claimed today by Dv,l Burr Ferguson, of Birmingham J" Ala a physician of the United Btates health department, in serv-1 ice at Southampton, on his arrival ' on the Majestic. s, FARM LOANS CHEAP MONEY! EASY TERMS NO COMMISSION Through our connection with The Atlanta Joint Stock Land Bank we offer farmers 6 per cent money for 33 years on the amortization basis— NO COM MISSION—with privilege of paying all or any por tion after five years. Cheapest and best plan ever offered the farmer. QUICK SERVICE. Americus Abstract and Loan Co. R. L. Maynard, President Reduces 33 Pounds “Three months ago I tipped the scales at 289 lbs. avoirdopois and feel like a new man. I owe this to . lbs. avoirdupois and feel like a new man. I owe this to \ WHOLE GRAIN WHEAT.” PETER J. ENRIGHT, 2508 So. Sartain St., Philadelphia, Pa. Whole Wheat Grain t This potent food is the natural wheat berry (the only sin gle food known to man which contains in balanced combina tion all the sixteen elements required each day for normal nu trition) in its whole form jujt as it comes from Nature’s lab oratory with nothing added and nothing taken away, and is wheat in its supreme nutritional effect, because it is the first w heat civilized man ever ate that has been cooked ready to serve without oxidation, distillation, or evaporation effects, the method of cooking being protected by the United States’ and Canadian Governments. It is not whole wheat flour, but is a food, after the form of peas and beans, and more potent in its nutritional effect than any cooked food ever before pro duced, because the cooking has not demineralized nor oxidiz ■■ cd its mineral constituents. K ir It is never sold through grocery stores but only through : authorized distributor. It comes in hermetically sealed sa«- i itary 11-ounce tins (ample for'Tour servings) and is sold in f packages of not less than one dozen (a 24-day supply because t regular u se is essential to results) delivered for $2.00 Guaran- F t ee . d t ° !pprove the user physically and mentally when used ! twice daily for 24 days or money refunded. Sold Only By MRS. R. T. MATHEWS Phone 862 For Delivery Come To 198 Cotton Ave. Si THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1923 EARTH AND MAKS TO COMMUNICATE, CLAIM PARIS, Dec. 13. —Mars is in habited by a small, frail race of creatures similar to human beings and some day science will reach the point where Mars and the earth will get into communication, say good morning and talk things over. These are the conclusions of Ca mille Flammarion, noted astronom er, who is studying means of com municating with the planet. "It is certain that we shall one day communicate with Mars by psy chic waves,” Flammarion declared in an interview.bere Tuesday, “Mars is inhabited-..'qj - -bgingj'similar to our race, but they are smaller and more frail than human livings as we know ! them, and are much larger. They ' are probably lahgjely ’ engaged in ag i riculture.” Golden eagles eat many small ro dents and larger animals such as i fawns and lambs. ; I i ’T’HE best footing 1 1 your car can 1 get on rain-swept t streets and slippery I • hills is the gripping II All-Weather Tread of a Goodyear Tire. j’ The high, thick, I , sharp-edged blocks of that famous tread take a slipless hold and hang on with a ,• i wedgelike action that prevents side slip or skidding. As Goodyear Service Station Dealers we sell and recom mend the new Goodyear Cords with the beveled All- Weather Tread and back V Aj them up with standard Goodyear Service AMERICUS STEAM VULCANIING CO., J. W. Lott, Manager eoonWfcAsi I t-r 1 ; —~ ..-av)’ j. f* 7 ~ ii * F; HAVELUNCH With Us Sandwiches, Hot Chocolate, Tomato Bouillion, Hot Cof fee, all hours during the day, 1 at Americus Drug Co. FOR QUICK SERVICE AND HEAVY HAULING PHONE 121 WOOTTEN TRANSFER CO. Office in America* Steam Laun dry SOUTH JACKSON STREET