Newspaper Page Text
KIPLING SEES BLACK
FUTURE IF KULTUR WINS
Says Laborer Will Work 18
Hours a Day and Be Paid In
Hard Kocks.
Folkstone, England, Feb 16.
(Correspondence of the Associat
ed Press ' -“Nothing else under
heaven matters today except that
the war shall go on to victory,”
declared Rudyard Kipling here
today in a striking picturesque
speech in advocacy of war savings.
“The money we loan to the gov
ernment helps to set our land and
our whrld free,” continued Mr.
Kipling. “Our security for our
loan is not only the whole of the
British Empire but also the whole
civilizatiorf which his pooled its
resources in men, money mid ma
t rial to carry on this war to vic
tory.”
What is the personal aspect of
the case for you and me? We
are fighting for our lives, the lives
of every man, woman and child
h< re and everywhere else.
“We are fighting that we may
not.be herd'd into actual slavery
such as the Germans have estab
lished by tore* of their arms in
large pat ts of Europe.
We are lighting against eighteen
hours a day forced labor under
lash or at the point of the bayonet,
with a dog’s death and a dog’s
burial at the end of it.
We are fighting that men, worn
en ahd children may not he tor
tured, burned and mutilated it the
public streets, as has happened in
this town and in hundreds of oth
ers. And we will go on fighting
till the race who have done these
things are in no position to con
tinue or repeat their'offense.
“If for any reas< n *vhat< ve we
fall short of vinory—and there is
no half way house between victo
ry and defeat—what happens to
us ? This:
‘Every relation, every under
st mdiiTg, evi ry decency upon
which civiiiziiim has been so
anxiously built up will go —will be
vv shed out, because it will have
been proved unable to endure
The whole idea of Democracy
which at bottom is what the Hun
fights against—will be dismissed
from men’s minds, because it will
h ive been shown incapaole of
maintaining its If against the Hun.
L will.die; audit will die discredit
ed, together with every belief and
practice that is based on it.
“The Hun ideal, and llun’s root
notions of life will take its place
throughout the world. Under
that dispensation man will become
once more the natural prey, body
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
1r Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
Signature of
THE GREAT WAR HAS MADE
CIGARETTES A NECESSITY.
“Our boys must have their smokes.
Send them cigarettes!” This is a
familiar appeal now to all of us.
Among those most in demand is
;he now famous “toasted” cigarette—
l.UCKY STRIKE. Thousands of this
iavorite brand have been shipped to
France. There is something home
like and friendly to the boys in the
sight of the familiar green packages
with the red circle.
This homelike, appetizing quality
r>f the LUCKY STRIKE cigarette is
largely due to the fact that the Burley
tobacco used in making it has been
toasted. 'Tt's toasted” was the “slo
gan” that made a great success of
LUCKY STRIKE in less than a year.
Now the American Tobacco Co. is
making 15 million LUCKY STRIKE
Cigarettes a day.
A good part of 'his immense pro
duction is making ts way across the
natei to cKesj: au>- hous.
aid goous, oi ills better-armed
neighbor. Women will be the
mere instrument for continuing
the breed ; the vessel of man’s lust
and man’s cruelty; and labor will
become a thing to be knocked on
the head if it dares to give trou
hie, and worked to death if it does
not. And from this order of life
there will be no appeal, no possi
bility of escape. This is what the
Hun means when he says he in
‘tened to impose German Kultur —
which is the German religion—
upon the world. This is precisely
vvliat the world has banded itself
together to resist.
“It will take every ounce in us;
it will try us out to the naked soul.
Our trial will not be made less by
the earnest advice and sugges
tions that we should accept some
sort of compromise, which means
defeat, put forward by Hun agents
and confederates among us. They
are busy in that direction.already.
But be sure of this: Nothing —
nothing we may have to endurt
now will weigh one featherweight
compared with what we shall most
certainly have to suffer if for any
cause we fail of victory.”
jj | Women! |
ft I Here is a message to
W suffering women, from
iff Mrs. W. T. Price, of
Public, Ky.: “I suf- m
H fered with painful...”,
she writes. ‘‘l got down
N with a weakness in my
hack aiul limbs...l fit
felt helpless and dis- is aG
f* couraged... I had about I R
M given up hopes of ever H jg
P n being v,*ll again, when ct 11
a,friend insisted I [M|
Take ™* J
Die Woman’s Tonic
I began Cardui. In '
| a short while I saw a t£j i
j marked difference... B!
IS | I grew stronger right * B (
[% j along, and it cured me. 01
J |i< I am stouter than I VjV
8 jig have bean in years.” ajm
If you suffer, you can Kj
appreciate what it ,
means to he strong and & £
9 3* well. Thousands of wo
fUm meu £lve Cardui the rNS?
fW I credit for their good | W
Ira I health. It should help fi
[III you. Try Cardui. At all gg
Ira J druggists. E-73 |g
IJ. — '. ' . 1.. ... —*■ -
Co o li n§ !
Delightful! Z'
These lliree words fitly describe ( ||S|
mPI % \
iiErp*Lol2 *
Sold only in sterilized bottles to \
insure uniformity and cleanliness / W \
Wholesome —Refresh i ng
\\ itli no bad after effect
Southeastern Fair.
Atlanta, G.t., March 30—Secre
tary Striplin of the Southeastern
Fair, Atlanta, has returned from
Washington where an important
conference of Government Ofti
cials and Managers of the big fairs
was held to discuss various details
in connection with the movement
of amusement companies, conces
sions, exhibits and live stock,
which are of vital necessity to the
fairs.
It is gratifying to announce that
arrangements have been approved
and orders issued by Railway Di
rector General Win. G. McAdoo
to place the movement of all such
traffic in the preferred class, which
enables the fairs to proceed with
their plans with assurance that
nothing will interfere with their
success.
This action expresses the degree
of importance in which the furs
are held by. the Administration
and recognizes that they are not
only potent factors in helping to
win the war by encouraging and
stimulating the production of-all
Kinds of food and feed crops, cat
lion on the part of the Government
tie, hogs, poultry, and especially
the conservation of foods, but it
emphasizes the need of whole
som • recreation after the sum
mer’s toil by providing good elean
entertainment- which sends the
The Southern Mortgage Co.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $300,000
Established 1870. Gould Building—lo Decatur Street—9l Edgewood Avenue.
‘farm LOANS
Negotiated throughout the State on Improved Farm Lands in sums
ol si,ouo to SIOO,OOO on Five Years time a’ reasonable rat*-s. Our sources
ot money are practically inexhaustible. We have a strong line ot customers
among individual investors and Savings Banks and Trust Companies in the North,
East and Middle Wesr, and'we number among our customers the
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
with assets of more than a hundred million dollars.
J T. Holleman, President W A. Thompson, Abstracts of Title
VV. L. Kemp, Vice-President J- G. Work, Abstracts of Title
J. W. Andrews, Secretary l r A. Bomighnv, Auditor
c, .. n , ... S. R. Cook, Secretary s Clerk
E. V. Carter, Attoiney T. B Dempsey, Abstract Clerk
A. d’Antignac, Inspector c. V. Felktr.'jr., Abstract Clerk.
W. A. Howell, Abstracts of Title Horace Holleman, Application Clerk.
For information, call on or write to
BROWN & BROWN
AVDONOUGH, GEORGIA.
visitor home with a new inspira
tion for their work next year.
The dates of the Soutiieastern
Fair have been set for October
12th to 1 Oth inclusive, and Presi
dent ! lastings and the Fair Man
agement have determined to show
co ff ee
and Good Cheer go together
lilce Possum and Sweet Potatoes
"OECAUSE Luzianne makes the best-tasting
cup of coffee you ever drank. It’s roasted
"When It just right. The fragrance you can’t forget it.
Pours, It And the flavor is delicious.
Rei a ns Coffee-lovers know that Luzianne just hits the
spot, for it’s full of punch and pep.
If you don’t think that this good old Luzianne
is worth what you paid, then tell your grocer
and he’ll give you back every cent.
their appreciation of this coopera
by leaving nothing undone to
,make the 1918 Fair not only one
of the in the United States,
but an effective institution lor as-'
sistlng in every way to further all
e Hurts for winning the war.