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RID AY, OCTOBER 8TH, 1928. RIDAY, OCTOBER 1ST, 1926.
Quality Meets Low Prices
with PATHFINDERS
—Made by Goodyear
-AND GUARANTEED!
Buy now at these low prices:
1 •*•*» ----imh,i
.<#
fM . Mi high pressure
u/wi mm 30x3% Cl. Fab......$ 8.15
m. ■v.i 30x3% Cl o. s. Cord 9,95
iff, 1 33x4 S. S. Cord...... 15.15
32x4 S. S. Cord 16.55
• 6 33x4 S. S, Cord 17.35
* fe ■< tir' , ill 30x5 S. S. Cord 27.65
m ww BALLOONS
r - i■: 29x4,40 S. S. Cord 811.25
«.m- 30x4.95 S. S. Cord
’J 16.60
*r. C ^ 30x5.25 S. S. Cord 17.45
. . 31x5.25 S. S. Cord 18.35
30x5.75 S. S. Corel 22.10
A DL 33x6.00 S. S. Cord 23.25
4 ; i If ri Above Prices For Cash
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We also have full, fresh stocks of the famous
Goodyear All- Weathers—arid Goodyear Tubes to
meet every need. Come to us for Battery and
Tire Kep' ir Service.
itizens Auto Supply Company
“Quick Tire Service” I J hone 294
3 G SI R II I 3 II B 1 1 9 S* H ■ 3C IB P 0 ■ B H «’1S .S.E II SI M4M ■ ■ ■
t Victory Theatre
he Public Has Waited Two,
Years to See This Film! i
'■-jin -• thrill marvel has
T3EX ^ INGRAM’S
been hailed as an epoch-making: the!
screen production! Two years in
£ 1 ma king, using thou:ands of players,:
0 >%. \ i filmed on t he actual locations on the’.
. A ;i Continent—this by its is bigness 3 picture and that nify wilt
in amaze you mag
Mr! ffTt \Jgm . cence! Submarine warfare revealed for the first time, and
against the background of a world in arms, the strangest*
1 11 the most moving love story ever told!
. • A mi 71Y the Great Author and
P:j \ \A' \Y Director of "The tour Horsemen”!
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fhree Big Days: MONDAY, October TUESDAY and 11,12,13 WEDNESDAY
12 3 S S S S ^ UigfiBiiEll'a®®
-• S E 8 S il 2 3 3 B 7 H 1
!
Hurricane Smashes Florida;
Pathe News Cameraman a Hero
I What Man Reads
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I
I By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK
Bean of Men, University of
Illinois.
Ay f-■ I BS. BELTON, our neighbor for a
time, u ;ed to make the state
ment that she could correctly judge
a woman’s taste and education by ex
amining the rugs on her floors. I
should not want to be so sure of this
myself, but you can tell a good deal
about a man if you know what he Is
In the habit of reading.
I hadn’t seen Scoville for a good
many years until last spring. 1 had
known him pretty well in college. He
had taken certain prizes in public
speaking; his grades in literature
were high, and he made Phi Beta
Kappa, in his senior year. There
wasn’t any doubt about his having a
good brain, and so far as financial
accomplishment is concerned, he had
succeeded admirably.
When 1 had talked to him a while
at our last meeting lie gave me the
impression that he was rather shal
low. He could talk about his busi
ness, but lie was not interested in cur
rent events. He knew nothing about
politics or foreign affairs or the labor
situation, and when it came to an
opinion on relief for the farmers he
was a minus quantity.
“What do you think of the Forsyte
Saga?” I asked him. I had been car
ried away with it myself and won
dered what a business man would
think of It.
“I don’t know,” he said, “What is
it?"
He didn’t know whether it was
prose or poetry, a treatise on Norse
mythology or a remedy for gallstones.
I soon discovered that Scoville only
scanned the newspapers to see whrt
the current prices were on the articles
with which his business wqs con
cerned. He read neither history nor
biography; he was acquainted with
neither poetry nor fiction, and politics
and science were to him foreign
tongues. Occasionally he read a light
magazine, and that was all.
Every intelligent person should
form the habit of reading and should
have books and magazines enough
around to tempt him to do so. He
should be familiar with what Is being
discussed in the newspapers in order
to know how the world Is going. He
should read the literature of his own
profession or business so as not to be
too far behind the times.
More than this, however, every man
should know something of literature
and poetry and biography and history,
and he should know these tilings not
only for the pleasure they will give
him, but for the sake of what they
wiU mean to his friends. General in
telligence requires it.
What a man reads is a measure of
his education, of his taste and of his
breadth of view. The man who does
not read, grows narrow and ignorant.
Scoville had a good start when he
was young, but when he stopped read
ing, ho began stagnate and to be
come commonplace.
(Cl.;. U*£C, Wi.dtern Newspaper Union.)
Rear Admiral Leigh
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Rear Admiral Richard H. Leigh is
being prominently mentioned as the
successor to Rear Admiral VV. K.
Shoemaker as chief of the United
States navy bureau of navigation
when the latter retires in February.
Admiral Leigh is now chief of staff
of the United States fleet.
Cemetery Working at
New Hope Thursday
The Messenger has been requested
to announce that Thursday, Oct. 14th,
has been set apart to clean off Out
New Hope Cemetery. Every person
interested is requested to come and
help. Men bring tools to work wflh,
and ladies bring bring lunches as a
basket lunch will be spread at noon.
University of Tennessee co-eds are
eating “a head of lettuce a day to
keep cosmetics away.”
CqI. Bibb Graves
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§
Col. Bibb Graves, attorney and
former adjutant general of the state,
won the Democratic nomination for
governor of Alabama after a bitter
contest. Democratic nomination in
Alabama is considered equivalent to
election.
Are You
“Toxic?”
It Is Well, Then, to Learn the Importance
of Good Elimination.
-pUNCTIONAL A 1 kidneys permits inactivity a retention of the of
waste poisons in the blood. Symp
toms of this toxic condition are a
dull, languid feeling, drowsy head
aches and, sometimes, toxic back
ache and dizziness. That the kidneys
are not functioning as they should is
often shown by scanty or burning
passage of secretions. Many readers
have learned the value of Doan's
Pills, stimulant diuretic to the kid
neys, in this condition. Users every
where endorse Doan’s. Ask your
neighbor!
DOAN’S PILLS
60 c
Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys
Foster-Milburn Co., Mf». Chem., Buffalo, N. Y.
Messenger Ads Pay
|BIIK m
J. A. GANDY
TRANSFER
Long and Short Hauls
PHONE 38
■
motor car
Performance
that startled the motor car industry
r PHE motor car industry presented was start- the
X led when Buick
new Buick with an engine vibro
tionless beyond belief.
If you have driven this great new
car, with this remarkable engine,
you know why.
Its fluid smoothness makes other
motor cars seem rough, harsh,
noisy.
People who have driven Buicks
for years and people who have
owned much more expensive luxury cars,
are ca ptivated by the
of this one.
THE Greatest
BUICK
*4045 EVER BUILT
M. C. McMANEUS
When better automobiles are built, Buick w ill build them
W
AH South of Palm Beach Badly
Damaged—One Company
Missing.
Along with other industries and
with civilians, the motion picture in
dustry suffered in the terrific Florida
hurricane. Also, in common with the
the others this industry, produced a
hero, a man faithful to his trust. The
outstanding features to date are:
All Florida theatres south of Palm
Beach were damaged.
Warned of the impending storm,
Earle, Pathe, News staff cameraman
at Miami prepared to photograph it.
He was imprisoned six hours, at one
time in a wrecked building, and in
jured by the debris, but he “carried
on.”
! [t was impossible for him to com-
1 municate with Emanuel Cohen, editor
of Pathe News, for instructions, so he
made his way to Jacksonville, got in
touch with Cohen chartered an air
plane to Atlanta and met another'
plane ordered by Cohen at Atlanta.
I Earle, almost exhausted from in
i juries and hunger but refusing to sur
render his precious film to anyony,
began the flight to Charlotte. This
plane was forced flown by fog and a
storm at Greenville, N. C. Earle com
mandeered a fast automobile which
caught'the Birmingham express.
The Pathe News representative
met him at Charlotte which took
Earle to Arlington, near Washington,
D. C. He sped in a fast automobile t)
the latter place, climbed in his fourth
Cohen personally received the precious
plane and flew to Jersey City. Editor
film. *
Earle was attended by Dr. Alexan
der Altschul of New York City. He
was in considerable suffering, largely
because he had spent three days in
salt water and sand without removing
his shoes or clothing, the public will
never know the rest. They will have
seen the pictures on the screen and
wonder mildly how they were gotten.
The Victory Theatre will show these
pictures here in addition to fhe regu
lar program, Thursday and Friday,
October 14 and 15. No change in ad
mission. Open 4 P. M. each day. Con
tinual run.
(A dvertisement.)