Newspaper Page Text
pbECEMBER 21, 1915
A REMARKABLE ONE-CENT
SALE HAS BEEN ANNOUNCED
STANDARD ARTICLES TO BE SOLD
FOR PENNY BY HORSLEY DRUG
(0., THE REXALL STORE,
A remarkable One-Cent Sale, a
new thing just instituted throughout
the country by the 7,000 Rexall drug
stores, is announced for Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
of this week at Horsley Drug Co’s.,
the Rexall drug store of Dawson.
The plan of this One-Cent Sale is
announced by the Rexall Company as
follows: On the days advertised a
purchaser who buys an article of es
tablished value at its regular price is
entiled to buy a second article, ex
actly the same, for one cent, no mat
ter what the regular established
price. An example, if a person buys
. tube of Rexall tooth paste for 25
cents a second tube is sold for one
cent. If the purchase is a Maximum
hot water bottle for $2 a second Max
imum hot water bottle may be taken
by the purchaser for one cent. Doz
ens of other desirable articles are
included in the sale.*
For Introduction.
A material part of the cost of all
merchandise is due to the expense of
introducing them to new customers.
Goods of standard value are sold to
many thousands of new users. The
Rexall concern believes that the best
advertising is the satisfied user; that
if one is pleased with a tooth paste,
soap or any other article he will con
tinue to use it. And thus the con
cern makes many new customers.
By selling for one cent goods rang
ing in price from ten cents to $2 the
Rexall store offers a strong induce
ment to try merchandise of the high
est quality and become a permanent
user. Distribution is increased at
less cost. Both the purchaser and
the Rexall Store gain.
Through Co-operatiomn.
Even so the One-Cent Sale would
not be possible except for the great
co-operative purchasing power of the
more than 7,000 Rexall Stores. These
stores operate six great factories with
pranches and control the entire out
put of others. Thus they are able
to sell goods of maximum value at
minimum price.
That there may be no misunder
standing as to the quality of these
products it is understood that the
Chalmers' &=
Gelatine
el Blsetia:4
AT THESE STORES
In making your Christmas purchases don’t fail to call at the stores using Auto Coupons. Purchasi f \ ;
help some lady win a Ford T_ng rom these stores you will
Davis-Davidson Company, Dry Goods,
Clothing, Shoes, Millinery.
Dawson Drug Co., Drugs and Jewelry.
E. B. Durham & Co., Furniture, Wag
ons, Buggies and Harness
Dawson Steam Laundry.
Dawson Ice and Coal Company.
Halladay & Co., sand 10 Cents Store.
The Dawson News, Printing and Ad
vertising. :
____________m iness houses. Tell your friends to buy from these stores, so you can get the Coupons. $618.00 in valuable
i Al v : if it d t r
e obtained only kg . ame at once if it does not appear.
-COUP-ONS e baway ane it costs nothing to win one. Send in your n pp |
prizes will be given : v b ag an MIBS OLADYS PINKSTON ....co-veradaisaveses sonasah & U
it \H%QPT%AF}{CII;QE ; 16,00 MRE. W. B. PINKETON .......ccovnnivnn iosornvsinh u, o iSN
DAWSON. MISS J N v...‘) : ;
== 600 MISS LOUISE M(‘.'NDVLTY :.\,,:‘?m : . BRONWOOD .
MM h ee S e SRR SN DNUORE AERIIER -se R e S MISS MARTHA GUNNBLLS ~..ccovesse cssoovnns shmmuat BN
BRR..v s i ie e o BEEES MISS MARY BELLE IRWIN .. ...oocveencene coneeenns ooon 3,000 MIGS BT BERRY »sveeerer e I
M AR R - o e e R R MISS NBLL TRWIN ......ocoseiernns seoecereses oooooe 3,000 MISS EDITH AVERA «.onoeeenrn seesissns sobmpuines SEate
MISS JESSIE ’{?}‘l{;’Qfi;'m&x"“'""' At taiho . HSN MRS. RENA HAUTMAN CHAMBLIS. ... o iienn eennnn 12600 O EERTTIE MAY GAMMAGE oo oo .
N iB5 B 1 CNNE s s e 7 BB . s e e S ev ( HOET = % P
\illgg MAMIE HASTY ... MR e, el ok R MRS, {I’];‘\“\HJS%{ORTHY T ekseene ke oy SEOE SASSER o
MISS CLEMENTINE ‘.\IARLL,\ e ULI v e 11;%00 :\/IRS W H CARBNER ...... 0 cceniuae eesservins ames.s ?f:'z":: M[SSw EMMA JORDAN ........cocoocvtooo. omssconiesnesnee 16,400 ~';,,'-[
NI TR BOOKE .- 0 s e TR MRS, WILLIE COBB' ... 10« ciuioies camoioanes oneees 21,300 MISS RENA LEE STEPHENS .. .....c0 vooeem smme it S
MENE PIRARRCTIE BIETY -.- 0 i, esicseascicho sRS RW O .t ok (ke ey vr eo v iSOOB MISS DOIE.IIA‘:YJ({%IS)AN fizgg S
MBS CLARE WOORRN -0 (00100 ILI ee 0 GRAVES STATION | M5B BESIE DAVIB. -oo.e i el e
R e.y e MISS LILLIE DISMUKE .......cooeeveeencens cooeesnoonns 19700 MISS LOUISE JORDAN .- eenes il e
:\”SSFI;OREIJLACROUCH"’ ..---'__,.. SRR 8,900 MISSCLEOAYCOCK.... RS &k kA Y ]-.:”“ MISS MARY LUCY MOUNT .. .. covcuvens """""""""0--l’m{: ’1;(‘
MIRS SEBMWOEA LATNG .. ------+-°c°to 5 0t T A MISS SUSIE CHAMBLISS .......c.c.oovncoeenn covnn--nnen L, MRS. CHERRY MORELAND .oo 00l ----~------'-:-'--'3:.§osT' ‘
MISS ANNIE AMMONS e PARROTT HEROD : i Nfi ,:1‘
MIESS MAMER TOOEE ...-.-- """ "' . ...00-ar BAEE . GR o i2R MISS BRONNIE MAY BRIM ......tccooee.s somsessn-ssanids SOG 0
O R ... el o e R Miss 'E5;1F’:'5R1EH&5EE.:::::::..........x..‘... g R MIGH ALMA MOLAIN .............:cveanee shussiyns i zx:zg
Mifs ARSGIMMMION -0l UL et T MISS IDALEE PRITCHARD ... oooiio voneonnenen oonoo 26,400 “sfiggk‘fii%fif%fi%fifim””'“"”” Peeeeesiai 11,3000
O R | ... oo onineee so i R MISS ALMA MENEAL . .evonnrssnarrianoan oeeenoo .o 13,000 ) e e
MISS MARY IBA]};l'l(‘)‘\_‘Y e ires Renusenalgl s B MISS MARY TILLEY . .....ooccovcies covenoen oooonooce 17,000 MISS CIE:JARéMLgIE";‘ON eevene e seenim bk inine oSe S
SIS AT RNEHBNY -\ - 000 L e ccidee o BRORE IS MELBY PUNIBYON .. iy <novisnivilier tincs - ins e nes 1600 MISS HELEN ity aasanesesenenans 67,4000
MISS LEO GURR ... .-+ AN SS S
MISS JESSIE FERGUSON -...--=* -~ ; e
e A A < —_—________.___..____,_.,m"::’ s
Rexall Store will cheerfully refund
the money paid on return of the
goods if after one tries them he feels
eaph item is not worth the regular
price. :
_Every one in Dawson and its ‘vi
cinity should take advantage of this
remarkable sale and should keep in
mind the dates—Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday, December
20, 21, 22 and 23.
TO GIVE RECITAL
TOMORROW EVENING
Classes of Misses Saville and Young
Will Entertain in Auditorium of
Public School Building.
The private classes of Miss Chap
Saville, music, and Miss Hazel Young,
expression, will give a recital in the
high school auditorium Wednesday,
Deec. 22nd, at 10 o’clock a. m. The
entire school will assemble to hear
the program by these special depart
ments, Admission is free, and pat
rons and friends of these classes are
cordially urged to be present. Fol
lowing is the program:
Duet—Louise Buchanan and Jim
mie McFarlan.
Solo—Ethel Jennings.
Duet—Ardis and Lynne Williams.
Solo—Elizabeth Kennedy.
Reading—Lucile Lewis.
Duet—Winnie Brim and Clemen
tine Marlin.
Solo—Nancy Gurr.
Dialogue—Louella Nasworthy and
Lucius Lamar.
Duet—Gladys Crowell and Helen
Eisman.
Solo—Thelma Kitchens.
Reading—Mildred Yeomans.
Solo—Frances Peddy.
Reading Veta Hautman.
Solo—Ralph Hill.
Reading—Rochelle Gurr.
Solo—Clementine Marlin.
Reading—Minnie Hatcher.
MAY EMPLOY ADDITIONAL
COUNSEI IN DAMAGE SUIT
Suit for $30,000 Damages Filed by
Wilbur Smith Discussed by Council.
At the meeting of the council Tues
dav night City Attorney Marlin call
ed the attention eof the body to the
$30,000 damage suit recently filed by
Wilbur Smith, the young man who
was seriously injured by coming in
contact with a live electric wire while
engaged in working on the wires of
the Dawson Telephone Co. ;
Councilmen Dean and Hamilton
were appointed a committee to con
fer with Mr. Marlin as to the advisa
bility of employnig additional_ coun
sel to assist the city attorney In con
testing the suit. The case will llkgl}'
come up at the May term of superior
court.
Wil Gin Onily on Saturday.
In future our gins will be run only
on Saturday. DAWSON COTTON OIL
COMPANY.
“HOW'S MY WIFE?" COST
FOND HUSBAND JUST $2B
All He Wanted Was For Police to See
If His Family Were Well.
PHILADELPHIA —Everybody in
the city hall was trying to guess why
Morris Grumberg, a traveling sales
man, had spent $28.75 telephoning
Superintendent of Police Robinson’s
office from St. Louis. All that Grum
berg wanted the police to do was to
call at the home of Mrs. Rose Morris
and ask whether his wife and chil
dren ‘“‘were all right.”
They were Mrs. Grumberg herself
I‘ooked out of a second story window
just before midnight and laconically
assured a policeman from the FKif
teenth street and Snyder avenue sta
tion there was nothing the matter
with herself or the children.
Grumberg, who telephoned from
the Planters hotel, St. Louis, talked
for twelve minutes at $5.75 for every
three minutes, with Clerk Alexander
Ferris in Supt. Robinson’s office be
fore Ferris understood who he was
and what he wanted. Then Ferris
telephoned the Fifteenth street and
Snyder avenue station house and a
policeman was sent to ask Mrs.
Grumberg how she felt. Ferris then
called St. Louis for three minutes
and told the Planters hotel operator
to tell him his wife and children
were well.
SHOT INTO THE DEPOT AT
CUTHBERT SUNDAY EVENING
Unknown Party Sent Bullet Crash
ing Through Window Pane.
About 6 o'clock Sunday evening a
shot—rtrom a pistol, it is supposed—
was heard between the news stand
and the passenger depot, and a bul
let crashed through a window pane
in the waiting room for whites. Two
or three persons were in the wait
ing room, but fortunately no one was
in line with the bullet.
Who fired the shot is a mystery.
Immediately afterwards no one was
found near by except a small nesro
boy, who claimed he didn't know
who shot. The Central road will
probably have the matter investigat
ed.—Cuthbert Leader.
INVITES MAN INTO AUTO
AND THEN ROBS HIM
Great Big Beautiful Doll Proves to
Be a Woman Bandit.
DALLAS, Texas.—Dallas has a
woman ‘‘auto bandit.”
Thomas Maxwell of Beaumont was
standing on the curb one night. A
areat big beautiful doll drove up in
a great big beautiful touring car and
stopped right in front of Lim. BShe
smiled. Then she invited Maxwell to
“Well, what would you have done?
ride with her. So did Maxwell.
“Thirty-five dollars and a check
for $46.90,” Maxwell told the police.
“I don’t see how she done it.”
R R G
Whenever You Need a Ueneral Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove'’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic propertiesof QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Puilds ur the Whole System. 50 cente,
THE DAWSON NEWS
THE DAWSON NEWS
DEPRIVED OF OWN DAUGHTER
BY DEATH WILL SPEND THEIR
WEALTH ON ADOPTED ONE,
Several months ago on a large
farm near Amboy, 111., there lived a
lonely couple_advanced in years and
without family or near relatives.
They were moderately wealthy;
worth about $200,000, but they had
no one on whom to lavish their
wealth or the riches of their loving
hearts. Once they had had a daugh
ter whose love and bright charm had
illumined their lives and they still
preserved the household treasures,
the splendid organ, the beautiful pi
ano, the thousand and one gifts of
affection with which it was their de
light to surround her. But, they were
left alone on life’s highway and the
fruit of shining promise had turned
to ashes’in their mouths. They were
very lonely in their large comfortable
home, patient with the world, kind
and gentle in their dealings with
their neighbors, but ever lonely.
Last summer Mr. Pankhurst, head
of the lonely family, appealed to the
Federal Immigration bureau to ob
tain for him a girl who would be
willing to do the housework and help
around the farm.
Mr. Pankhurst stipulated that he
would leave $lO,OOO to the young
woman in his will when he died. The
newspapers aided him in his search,
giving publicity to the fact that he
was lookng for a daughter more than
a servant.
Mary Smith, of Chicago, was se
lected from thousands of applicants
and it is a pelasing thing to notice
that there has been mo disappoint
ment on either sde after several
months of trial, no rift in the lute,
no harsh winter frost withering the
summer idyll.
S 0 well satsfied is Mr. Pankhurst
with Miss Smith that he declares he'
wants to leave her half of his for
tune. He says he is worth approx
imately $200,000.
Mr. Pankhurst asked the immigra
tion authorities to draw up a con
tract for him, which, in addition to
his will, would insure Miss Smith
getting the money he intends leaving
her.
WAR UPON PAIN.
Pain is a visitor to every home,
and usually it comesg quite unexpect
’edly. But you are prepared for ev
ery emergeuncy if you keep a small
"bottle of Sloan’s Liniment handy. It
is the greatest pain killer ever dis
covered. ‘Simply laid on the skin—
no rubbing required—it drives the
pain away. It isfreally wonderful.
Mervin ‘H. Soister, Berkeley, Cal.,
writes: ‘“‘Last Saturday, after tramp
ing around the Panama Exposition
with wet feet, I came home with my
neck so stiff that it couldn’t turn. ¥
applied Sloan’s Liniment freely and
went to bed. To my surprise next
morning the stiffness had almost dis
appeared. Four hours after the sec
ond application I was as good as
new.” March, 1915, At Druggists.
25 cents.
FIRST GRAND PRIZE
. AA i e
[ p— ’ I
SR
R U ;
A
1916 Model Ford Touring Car
BOUGHT OF LAMAR AUTO CO.
FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND 1
DOLLARS FOR AN INVENTION
Report Says Brothers Made Rich by
New Farm Invemtion.
Andrew Kirth, of Madison, Wis.,
and his brothers, William and Math
ew Kurth, of Wamakee, are said to
have sold their invention of a corn
and grain shocker for $500,000. The
Kurth brothers have worked on the
invention during the past year and
claim that it will largely revolution
ize the harvesting of grain and corn.
Strong and Well as Ever.
Fred Smith, Green Bay, Wis., says:
“Foley Kidney Pills completely re
lieved me of all soreness and pain
in the back and I now am strong and
well as ever.” Cold weather makes
aching joints, sore muscles and ir
regular bladder actiod’ more unbear
able. Foley Kidney Pills help the
kidneys eliminate paincausing pois
ons. Dawson Drug Co.
Free Auto Coupons
WITH .
All Cash Purchases
Get 1n the game. Somebody;s sure to win a valuable
prize. Our line of
Furniture and Household Goods
is complete, and our prices are right. Let us show
you some of the values we are now offering for Xmas.
E. B. DURHAM & C 0.,,
Dawson, Georgia
Budded Pecan Trees For Sale
I have ready for this winter's market Ten Thous:
and Budded Peacn Trees, all paper shell and BEST
VARIETIES. A
I have no agents, and therefore can sell cheaper than oth:
er nurseries will sell you by the dozen and upwards.
2 to 3 feet high at 40c each .
3 to 4 feet high at 50c each ’ |
4 to 5 feet high at 60c each
5 to 6 feet high at 75¢ each >
6to 8 feet high at $1 each ;
F. O. B. Parrott, Ga. TERMS: One half cash with order;
balance C. O. D. on arrival of trees. You will be pleas‘ed
with what I ship you. Yours very ruly, ;
Reference by Permission, Bank of Parro. :
Lamar Auto Company, Auto Accesso
ries and Supplies.
Dawson Bakery and Cafe '
Wall Brothers, Fancy Groceries.
The Palace Theatre, Moving Pictures.
The Standard Pressing Club.
Dawson Market and Grocery Compa
ny, Fresh Meats.
Moore & Jackson, Barber Shop. .
Battle Hardware Company, Hardware.
PAGE SEVEN