About Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1925)
PAGE EIGHT THE PALLADIUM WORKER VOLUME I—NO- 1 I ©GROCERIES -■■THCWOB r. , You re what you get— You know what you get— You pay for what you get— You get what you pay for— AT LOWER PRICES PIGGLY WIGGLY W. Joe Smith, Palladium I .. __________________ ? THE I Domestic Bread- Miulc in Americus MODEL BREAD CO. J. F. Finch, Palladium THE WORK EP. “We Have It—You Need It” ftTy wait? Come in and buy what you want. Fay part down and pay some every week. Josey - English - Dupree Co. Lamar St., Opposite 4 Windsor Hotel R. O’ English, Palladium © the WORKERS Let Your Phone ' Bring Your Food V our telephone receiver s easier to lift than u 1<; k'l market basket. CALL 110 and 102 Save Lime Save Bother We Deliver Ea so m- Ma rti n Mark ct » T. L. Martin, Palladium M J. F. MONAHAN Staple and Fancy Groceries 104 Colton Avenue Phone 547 J. F. Monahan, Palladium TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1925 f Ihe College Boy And His Dad In a few more clays that Son of whom you are so proud will leave for college. Many of them for the first time are leaving the parental roof and the protecting care of Mother and Father. Much has been said about the BOY writing back, home. We have our Mother s days and our Father’s days, when sons and daughters are counseled to write a letter back to those who remain under the roof where first we saw the light of day, but there’s another side, too. Never in his life will a letter be so welcome as those first letters FROM Mother and Dad to the Boy off at school. He’s lonely. He misses the good-night kiss and the fatherly pat as he goes off to bed. That Boy realizes that he is off on his own; new temptations confront him; viscious counsel and bad examples will beset him. Whatever your literary talent may be, write that Boy a letter two or three times a week, you busv Fathers. Mothers seldom forget, but Fathers are likely to leave the letter writing wholly to her. She should write and she will but that Boy needs a chummy letter from his Dad, a -letter similar to this one from a Georgia Dad to his Son: Dear Son: By this lime you have unpeaked your luggage, as "Artie" would say, removed the. dust of travel from your person, addressed the waiting throng that welcomed you to the classic grounds of the university and arc now meditating upon “how the thing is going to turn out for the next few years. I have been just wondering what impression you have of the sur roundings in which you now find yourself preparatory to increasing your store of learning that comes from the books of a college and from contact with • your fellow travelers in the pathway of knowledge. I can imagine you asking yourself the question, "Now that I'm here, is this place where i must adjust my Thinking Cap as I have never monkeyed With this headpiece before, and will the piece of sheepskin they finally place in my strong right hand enable me to whip the world to a frazzle?" First impression are the most lasting, it is said, hence 1 am hopeful that the whole layout, if one may use that undignifed word in connection with a temple of wisdom, has struck you in the most favorable light. Perhaps here and there some things may raise that have a tendency to bit ycu the wrong way, but you must now allew them to lessen your determination to make the most of your opportunities in perhaps the last laps of the race wbich means so much to your future entry in life’s handicap for bigger stakes. Somehow or other, when 1 told you goodbye at the train. 1 had the feeling that you had made up your mind to get a “bulldog's grip" on your self and leap mto the arena with a victorious look in your eye, and 1 went away filled with the happy though that my son was going to outstrip the mediocre entrants not only at college, but in the business world outside when the "Let’s Go" slogan came to his ears. -f our old dad is willing to pay your bills, even if he has to make some sacri.ices to do so, for he wants you to win. An education which he nimself had a hard lime getting ought to come to you a little easier with your present opportunity. So, got to it, my boy, in the way you know is straight and in keeping with the high ideas of a gentleman and a scholar.” Father will more than be repaid when that Boy ans wers those weekly letters. That Boy will soon find him self confiding in his Dad He 11 tell him of his successes — and his failures; will he make Father acquainted with his new-found friends. I hose letters between Father and Son will weld a chain that only time can sever it. 4 t Al. 1 members are urged to be present tonight °t 8:00 o’clock sharr. r Hu sines s of Importance THE AMERICUS TI.MES-RECORDER - TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 8, 1925 PUBLISHED EVERY OTHER TUESDAY © |'*THE WORKERS" WORKERS I CMen’s Furnishings Department is at Your Serv ’t'Summer Clothing Priced SIO.OO to $35.00 WURCHWELL’S | Jim Gary, Palladium - m—i ■■ ■ —l . |L _ . . • A. • " 7H *~ WORKERS'* ; Ys, We Weld ! NO ) TOO SMALL, NONE TOO LARGE. \IL WORK GUARANTEED. Atiricus Welding and tadiator Works lohn B. Dorsey, Palladium ■ 335 Mesbpnar St. Ph one 943 | 1 H A TH<WOaKtRS"~] , Plunbing-Tinning • Esimfts Cheerfully Furnished Giymtecd Satisfactory Work E. J. SCHROEDER Palladium Lee Stree Phone 290 H 4 g i ! WORKERS** J AMERWJS’ O'N DAILY NEWSPAPFR For the WoikinjMan Tor the Rich Man DEVOTED T THE INTERESTS OF AMHUCUS >4D SUMTER COUNTY Deliveretgy Mail or Carrier THE, AMERICIi TIMES-RECORDER C. J. Wikms, Palladium Forrest Street % Phone 99 -A - - -4 _ * —V A. || The Workin; Man’s Store Staple Fancy . Groceries UNITED GRiCERY CO. - C. E. Niblack Palladn c. K. Howard