The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current, November 09, 1922, Image 2
P'\or\iQorr\<3ry Monitor. PUBLISH!:!) EVERY THURSDAY. CIAL OMAN MONTGOMERY COUNTY. Entered a! fix- Postofllcf in Mt. Vernon, Oa, H**cond-( laxn Mail Matter. H B FOLSOM, Owner and Associate EleVa £ B B t' DK ! L*‘* cel ,B< * Publishers. *-5° a Year * in AdvanCe M~L< gal »<lv«*rtim rnentH munt fin h: i it.! . La* ; »«w1 i ftdv.iwo, at the !<•(/»! rate, aud an the law directs; and mod he in hand tint lat#*r than Wednenday morning of the Drat week of inaertioo Mount Vernon. Ga.. Thursday Morning, Nov 9. 1922. Just about like you predicted, eh? But it is to he observed that many predictions that crop out after election had, through some form of oversight, not been made a matter of record—just as predicted—and there is little chance to tell whose prediction pans out right in matters politi cal. Another political meteor has fallen—sadly so. Old Governor Sid Catts, who filled the execu tive’s chair in Florida several years ago, is now being tried on peonage charges, based on find ings while governor. Takes a long time to get the wind out of such derelict ballons, but when they do fall it is a mighty thump, then —well nothing. Those oats—mighty good time to put them under the soil. The oat crop brought a good price this year, and there has been a strong demand for seed for fall planting. One feature about oat growing which has ever appealed to our mind (agriculturally speak ing, in a newspaper) is the fact that they demand no further plowing after being put under the ground. Through optimistic vision we cannot see the world going di rectly to the devil, but with a. glance highly tinctured with pessimism, it is easy to behold the devil approaching dangerous-' ly near the earth. The chroni-1 cle of current events reveals in no uncertain terms the latter view, however morbid and shock ing the situation. The daily newspapers, those great mes sengers of intelligence, are bur dened with accounts of crime, death, debauchery and destruc tion of every form and nature within the scope of man’s imagi nation, and the world reads and I passes on, seemingly unconcern ed. The world does not condone; crime, hut stands by while the cohorts of evil stage the drama overladen with criminality. In difference to the Supreme law' al lows the trend toward evil, and unless the world is awakened to the responsibility of mankind t»> its Creator, sooner or later there will be room for nope or optimism the day of salvation will have passed. I AILEY • DRUG . CO. 1 The Drug Store fills u very im portant plate in any thrifty S | community. Ours is even § J more than this—it is a Real Neeesssity | | | DRUGS, TOILET ARTICLES I I I I GARDEN SEEDS, CANDIES j | I 1 STATIONERY, SOFT DRINKS I | CALL ON US DAY OH NIGHT. WE ARE IN | BUSINESS TO SERVE AND SATISFY § I AILEY DRUG CO. § | AILEY, GA. mrnmmmmßm&mmmmmsmamn There was recently unveiled in a great Northern city the corner stone of a twenty-one story church building, calculated to cost millions. The pastor well said that never before has the world looked so strongly to the church as the solution of its prob lems, and pronounced it the agency through which the world i can be saved from-chaos, but af ter all it is a question if the greater number of people can be reached through skyscraper edi fices, when the same money would have built several hundred churches costing many thousands etch and spread over a broader field. The final chapter in the Cooper- Carmack feud is written. Dun can B. Cooper, who, with his son, Robin, shot to death Senator Edward Carmack on the streets of Nashviiie. Tenn.. fourteen years ago, recently died at the age of seventy-nine. Cooper was pardoned by Governor Patterson without having served his sen tence, and the son was mysteri ously murdered a few years later. Fate overtook the younger, seem ingly in a more horrible manner than he had aided the death of Carmack, hut it remained for death, the Great Eeveler, to re move from the arena of blood the lone and unperished actor in a ! tragedy which shocked not only Tennessee but the South. t vv vv vvTvmTmmw • (ioorgia State < j ► M ► Press Expressions. * » 4 • AAAAAAAAA*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Columbus seems to be unani mous for Andy Gump. The En quirer-Sun says its readers are backing the candidate who is ‘TOO tier cent, for the people”.— j Savannah Press. Says the flippant Albany Her ald, ‘‘Gypsy Smith, the great 1 evangelic t, has just closed a most sure -ssful campaign in Savannah, and it is evident from what we have.beon reading in the Savan nah papers that our brethern of the press in'!hat city weceamong the .i a louts.” As if the brethren of the press were not always “right”. If everybody would I only 1)« as good as newspaper men,' Mr. Herald, wouldn’t things Ibe lovely? Savannah News. THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA. With Harris and George in the ' Senate, Crisp in Congress and Walker for Governor, Middle and South Georgia will have the best opportunity fin, its history for recognition in public affairs, while Georgia as a whole can boast of these men as clean, hon orable and upright the equal of whom but few States in the union can furnish. —Butler Herald. We are in line for invitations to cane grindings, corn shuck ings, log rollings or anything else where a good feed will take place. —Soperton News. “As an example of the business judgment of a few farmers, we submit the following: A man who owns'a good one-horse farm in this county planted twelve acres of his best land in cotton this year, cultivated it as best he Oi'd, but made no attempt to keep the boll weevils out of it. 1 He got one bale of cotton for his year’s work, and now wants to: sell out and move to' Florida.” — Thomasville Press. This county is in need of a greater respect for law and or der. It\is likewise in need of, more officers'.who possess’ the honesty and nerve to enforce that law.> As long as V-0-T-E spells “law” we will continue to be long on laws and short on: their enforcement. In the mean-1 time, the people who* put these; birds office have no| reason,to complain, of.the things, they don’t do.—Metter Adver tiser. Epping School Honor Roll. Fourth Grade—Etty Spivey. Fifth Grade—Lillie Mae Spi vey, Reeta Minton, Thelma Min ton. Sixth ’Grade—Herbert Clark, Herbert Walker, Raymond Joyce. Seventh Grade—Ovid Graham, Bertha Graham,'Bernice Davant, Myris Davant. Epping School met Friday af ternoon, October 20th, for the purpose of organizing a literary society. It was decided that it should be called “The Henry W. Grady Literary Society.” The following officers were elected: Baldie King, President; Raymond Joyce, Vice President; Reeta Minton, Secretary and Treasurer. Got What They Must Have. A small farmer who is a per sonal friend of the Editor’s writes us as follows: "The land in this neighborhood has been starved to death and now the land is starving us in re turn. Whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap. I have been thinking I would sow a winter cover crop every year but when fall came I could not see where I could spare the cost of a cover crop.” The fact that interests us in connection with this letter is that this man always finds away. we believe, to purchase fertilizer in the spring of the year. When farmers get to the point wher< they realize they simply “must have” cover crops and legumi s just as truly as they “must have” fertilizers, a new day will dawn for Southern agriculture.—Pro-! gressive Farmer. —BATTEY & CO., the large and re liable cotton factors of Savannah, Ga offer a service that combines long and successful experience, expert sales- y FARM LOANS f Quick Action Low Interest Lowest Commissions 8 J. E. Hall or N. L. Gillis, Jr., Sopcrton, ua. I ATLANTA TRUST CO. 444444444 +**'4'*'*%*- * 444444444444444444444# . 4 4 | Oconee Pharmacy I * (The Drug Store Around the Corner) J 4 # I l| DOZIER & GAY DISK-GRADE | f FAINTS, WINDOW GLASS, etc. I | 4 5 4 WU%UV<.XAUHUtWI,W.VU* S. VWV«V« 5 PARKER and DUNN FOUNTAIN PENS I t KEITH AND HY-TONE STATIONERY % 4 £ 4 lit These Standard Pens appeal to the individual who wants 4 rife* ! J an article that can be depended on for Constant Service £ PRESCRIPTIONS f zju h J/ * Accurately Compounded From £ 4 * Pure, Fresh Drug’s * * COMPLETE LINE CHOICE TOILET ARTICLES % 4 No matter liow exacting your taste may be, J 4 there is something in our assortment that will * please your taste, and at reasonable figures 4 j OCONEE PHARMACY t * H. H. Morrison, Prop. Mt. Vernon * /T 4 #■ ************** ************************** NOT AS SHE HAD PICTURED Girl Who Had Herself Paged in Hotel Unprepared for Meeting With Flippant Individual. The girl hud never been paged in a hotel. Time after time she had heard the bellboys go by calling out names, and always she had envied the young women who got up and followed them to the telephone. It got to he a positive mania with her — this desire to be paged —and finally she persuaded one of her friends to telephone her at a hotel at i a specified time. She waited in the lobby, sitiing on | the edge of tier seat in excitement, un til tin- boy appeared. "Miss Brown! Miss Brown!" She rose excitedly. "1 am Miss Brown,” she said. "Gentleman waiting to see you out front.” She looked rather surprised; that ! I had not been in the scheme. But per- i j haps be had changed his mind. She | followed the boy obediently, and was led face to face with a perfect ! stranger. Her face grew pink with confusion us she gazed at him, and he, realizing the mistake, watched her in amuse- ! tuent. He was a rather loudly dressed young man with a great air of assur ance. For a moment they stared; then he spoke. "Not so good,” he said slowly, and then, as an after thought, "but not so bad, either!” And the girl lied in embarrassment. DR. V. M. BARCO y| .Chiropractic'Specialist | J HmU: Offices "over Bank of Soperton, Soperton. Ga. Mrs. J. E. Thompson’s, Vidalia At Soperton, Mon Wed-, Friday At Vidalia, Tues. Thurs., Sat. > TilE oTTYMAKKET 1 Is the Place to Get at All Times 5, the Most CHOICE 5 * Fresh Meats, Fish and Oysters J jj STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES < j> Our Service and Standard of Quality are Recognized i by a Constantly Growing Patronage. Free i Delivery—the Instant Kind—that Pleases j ij, W. A. SMITH MT. VERNON j (k Al j/it jfit jdfis. >/V rfit Jk. J&L j£V W W. .dV i 111 supporting the county paper, yoi get more than value received. MAKES ’EM LAY Egg Mash Produces Eggs and the Hens Like it | Put up in Large Size Packages and I Sold at Agreeable Prices. Try it j j 1 DRY GOODS and | FANCY GROCERIES jj For lack of room, we cannot carry an extensive stock, hut run strong on ||| | VARIETY AND QUALITY If not a customer, come in and join the satisfied people who buy from us ; i j McC rimmon’s Store 1 S MT. VERNON, GA. yS • (I ; ;