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[UESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1920
i
vicßo CHURCHTO
EEUN .
!Fv‘-“m)lfi"l‘s WOULD MAKE FIF-
N £ ANNIVERSARY MEMOR
\BLI OCCASION FOR GOOD.
8 Sr——— - .
The €0 ored Me_thodist. Episcopal
b A merica Is.plannmg to cele
chU¥ts fiftieth ÜBIVEFRREY through
bratt o connection this year by Episco
out Mistricts. Each bishop will have
pal 70 oram in his respective field.
%_fl"_";‘“’.:g}nake it possible to avoid a
ibersome meeting that would be
ot all of the the churches were
Ca‘i\led together in one place for such
celebration and it will give opportun
ity for the state conferences and the
pen generally to give expression as
regards fifty years of progress In this
pranch of Methodism. :
“The main features of the meeting
will be he review of the struggles,
cocesses and the future development
52\,;\.0 church, house and membership
orowth and to raise funds for educa
fon and missions. This will be an
Loressive Program for the cntxrel
E}?th and each section has very defi
pite aims in the raising of funds to
qupport some of the needy secondaryi
“hools, This idea is especially em
phasized in the distriet of Bishop L. H.‘
Holsey in Georgia. The plans are
materializing very rapidly. His meet
e is to be held in Columbus, Ga.,
geptember 5-8. In this meeting the
state will be aroused as never before%
upon the opportunity and the duty of
the church to more carefully espouse
the cause of education, to build better
and more attractive houses of worship
and to make the church more an in
clusive institution with. a program
«that will look forward to the general
divection of the life of the young.
Districts Organized.
The committee on plans and ar
yanzements that met in Macon jn June
| yequested that each presiding elder
organize his district and urge that
cach member and friend give a dona
tion for the cause of education and
missions. 1R
The white Methodists are asked to
give liberally to this movement as in-
Tividuals. Their contributions are to
be used for the aid of the Helena B.
Cobb institute, Barnesville, and the
Holsey Academy, Cordele. Each of
these schools is suffering for main
huildines. The money of the white
sembers and friends of the Methodist
Church South will be used as a “mem
rial fund” in honor of the historic re
lation of the Methodist Church South
md the colored Methodist church in
A merica,
Organized Church.
I+ is known that the Methodist
Church South not only organized the
Jlored Methodist ehurch, but for fif
tv vears of its existence the leaders
of each respective church, such as
Bishops Haygood, Keener, Duncan,
Pierce, Payne, Candler, McLeroy,
Ainsworth, Williams, Carter (white)
and Holsey, Miles, Lane (colored)
have worked together along religious
\imes and general educational endeav
ors. Paine College at Augusta with
such presidents as Dr. George W.
Walker and Dr. J. W. Gilbert, the
scholar of the C. M. E. church, has
been the co-operative school between
ie tWo races and as an intellectual
and spiritual mill for the colored has
orown steadily “for 38 years prepar
ng young negroes for life’s duty upon
Southern soil, showing very beautiful
lv how the race problem may be solv
¢l through prayer and zeal of the
two peoples.
HALF MILLION ACRES
IN PHILIPPINE SUGAR
_ MANILA, P. IL—Close to 555,000
acree R the Philippine Islands were
f}‘f‘“v ed to sugar this year, the bureau
]‘v“t:»]mmerce and industry- has esti-
RUB-MY-TISM
Is a powerful Antiseptic and
Pain Killer,cures infected cuts,
old sores, tetter, etc. Relieves
Sprains, Neuralgia, Rheumatism
There can be no doubt
as to the merit of Cardui,
the woman’s tonic, in
the treatment of many
troubles _lpeculiar to
women, he thousands
of women who have been
helped by Cardui in the
past 40 years, is conclu
sive proof that it is a
good medicine for women
who suffer. It should
help you, too.
Take
GARDUI
y
The Woman's Tonlc
- A
Mrs. N. E. Varer, of
Hixson, Tenn., writes:
“l was pa'ts:ngthrough
the .. . My back and
sides were terrible, and
my sufiefihg ( -
ble. T can't tell just how
and where | m& about.
all over, I think ...
began (fardui, and my
pains grew less and less,
until lgwas cured, lam
remarkably strong for a
woman 61 {ears of rafe.
Ido all my ‘housework,”
Try Cardui, today, E-76
Bottom Drops Out of Farm Pasture;
25 Acres Sink Thirty Feet in Night
BURKE, 8. D.—Twenty-fiver acres
of Charles Deegan’s farm suddenly
sank 30 feet one night recently, and
where once his best pasture lay he has
nothing but a lot of not very beautiful
scenery.
The pasture dropped straight down
ward, leaving here and there pinna
cles 10 feet 'in diameter and 30 feet
high. Geologists say that the land
was probably supported in the past by
a subterranean lake that has been
emptied in some mysterious manner.
They base this on the fact that a num
ber of low-lying surface pends and
akes have lately filled up.
The sun Ken piece was the favorite
GO UP ON. AUG. 25TH.
ADVANCED RATES GO IN EF
FECT THAT DATE. GOVERN
MENT HAS LOST $1,500,000,000.
WASHINGTON.—New passenger
fares probably will become effective
August 26, and advanced freight rates
August 25, according to a program
outlined tonight by Alfred P. Thom,
general counsel for the association of
railway executives.
Simultaneously with the effective
ness of passenger fares the increased
charges for Pullman travel and the
new rates on excess baggage and milk
also will be put into force.
Railroad rate experts have begun
the preparation of blahket rate sched
ules increasing the transportation cost
on a percentage basis. These will be
‘presented to the interstate commerce
commission five days prior to the pro
posed effective dates.
Government Obligated.
The government has been obligated
to continue the $75,000,000 monthly
rental payment which was in effect
during the federal control, as welr as
to meet deficits not covered by the
rental amount, sustained by the indi
vidual carriers. Included in the
charges which will fall on the treas
ury in these deficits is that portion
of the $600,000 wage award covering
labor costs from May 1 to September
1, when the guarantee expires. This
Iwas officially estimated at $206,000,-
000. Thus the American people*will
pay one-third of the increased wages
for the railroad employees this year
in taxes.
“ With the amount gained, the car
riers tHis year and the claims of the
lines for . compensation under their
contracts with the railroad administra
tion, the roads will have cost the gov
ernmen’ approximately a billion and a
half doilars since President Wilson
took over the properties Recember 28,
1917.
FIGURES SHOW PROSPERITY
AMONG NEGRO COTTON PICKERS
) r
Earn Ten Million Dollars a Year Gath
ering the Staple. Own Miilion
and a Half Acres of Land.
Some interesting figures recently
put out by Martin V. Calvin, statisti
cian from the state department of ag
iculture, indicate that the money earn
ed by Georgia negro women and chil
dren in harvesting 60 per cent of thes
state’s cotton crop since 1903 is a most
‘important economic factor, and that if
‘the negro population thus concerned
‘had been as frugal and as saving as
Japs or Chimese he chances are that
they now would be owning a large
proportion of the best cotton lands of
the state. |
| As it is, the figures show that the
negroes have done pretty well. Mr.
Calvin’s report says that in 1907 the
negro women and children of Georgia
earned $8,371,447 picking cotton, and
in 1913 $10,558,065.
A good deal of these earnings
lseems to have gone into land, as ne
groes ‘owned 1,450,000 acres of farm
land in 1907, and by 1919 the amount
had risen to 1,760,000, while the doz
en years from 1907 to 1919 their live
stock investments had increased 104.6
per cent, they owning in the last year
live stock to the value of -$12,443,682.
In the same period Georgia negroes
increased their property valuations
from $25,904,822 to $54,858,301—a gain
of 112 per cent in land and household
furniture.
BABY BAPTIZED ON GIRDER,
- 14 STORIES FROM STREET
Fifty Ironworkers on Steel Beams
Nearby Were Named Godfathers
at Unique Ceremony.
NEW ORLEANS.—Fourteen sto
ries fro mthe street, on a slender gird
er of steel, Ole Peterson, structural iron
worker, held his five-months-old son at
noon - today while the Rev. William
Reese performed a christening cere
mony. Fifty members of Iron Work
ers’ Union No. 58 were named god
fathers. They occupied positions on
nearby girders.
Below the christening party there
were no floors and through the net
work of steel could be glimpsed the
concrete basement. The baby appar
ently was bored.
Members of the union had suggested
that it would be appropriate to have
the child of a structural iron worker
christened while his father was “on
the job.” The mother gave her con
sent, details were arranged and the
child gorm:?y came into possession of
the name of Weed L. Peterson.
e e ey
“ Has Never Seen Their Equal.
“I have used Chamberlain’s Tablets
for stomach trouble, biliousness and
constipation off and on for the past
ten years. I hayve never seen their
equal yet, They strengthened my di
gestion, relieved me of headaches and
had a mild, glemnt action on my
bowels. I take pleasure in recom
mending them,” writes H. D. F. Par
menter, Cridersville, Ohio. ‘
part of the pasture, and the night be
fore the big drop the cattle that usu
ally occupied it refused to leave the
shelter of the farm buildings, bellow
ing mightily and running back every
time they were driven to that corner
of the field.
The Deegan farm contains a deep
projected canyon in which there are
boiling springs, and flowers bloom in
the canyon all the year and the grass is
always green. Five years ago the
birds discovered in it an ideal winter
resort, and since then thousands of
them save the long southern hike and
nest there in their steamheated apart
ments.
FINDER RETURNS $25,000
BAG OF GEMS; GETS $2O
Saw Bag of Valuables Drop from a
Speeding Automobile. :
NEW YORK.—Henry McKuckin, an
undertaker’s assistant at Hastings-on-
Hudson, on Saturday received a $2O
bill—as his reward for returning a
b'ack Teather bag containing $25,000
worth of diamonds and other valua
bles, the property of Mrs. Cecil Page
of Philips Manor, Tarrytown, which
had dropped from an automobile.
McGuckin was walking in Hastings
when the auto flashed past, and a bag
dropped out. MecGuckin ran after the
chauffeur to stop him, but his cries
were unheeded.
~ When McGuckin opened the bag at
home he found a card bearing Mrs.
lPage’s name.
This enabled him to return the bag.
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THE DAWSON NEWS.
THREE THOUSAND INVESTIGA
TORS IN U. 8. SERVICE, EACH
BUREAU HAS ITS MEN
Detective branches of the federal
government are developing at a rapid
rate, officials in charge of the various
investigating offices at Washington
say.
Ambitious young Americans who
long for the excitement and mysteries
of the sleuthing existence have found
this out, and are besieging the differ
ent departments with applications,
these officials asserted.
Inquiry developed Uncle Sam is pay
ing approximately 3,000 men and a
few women for investigating work.
__ Treasury Keeps Its Secret
The pioneer government detective
agency, the secret service of the treas
ury department, never divulges the
size of its force, but it is supported by
appropriation of $400,000 annually, and
its men in many casesgare paid by oth
er departments using its services, so
the amount for support is largely in
creased.
The largest detective branch is that
if the Department of Justice, which
has $2,000,000 annually and which
likewise refuses to tell much more
about its force. Its pay varies from
$5 to $25-a day and expenses, and
the number on duty during the height
of the campaign against the “reds”
wag close to 600.
The postal inspectors, recently en
gaged in the crusade against fake
work is the most popular of the post
office service. : \
The Department of Agriculture has
charge of the enforcement of 35 laws
whigh require pure food and drug offi
cers,” and others who check up on
weight standards, warehouse laws and
game law provisions. 2 1
The state department has a select‘
force of highly experienced men to
gain information of value to this coun-]
try.
Heavy “Booze” Force.
In addition to its secret service the
treasury department recently has em
ployed hundreds of investigators in
the bureau of internal revenue. Part
of these are prohibition enforcement
agents, others check up on income and
other federal tax returms. Seventy
six men are employed in the bureau
of war risk insurance as field men to
investigate insurance and compensa
tion claims.
The department of labor has inves
tigators for its bureau of immigration
and naturalization. The interior de-‘
partment requires investigating serv
ices for the general land office, Indian
affairs office and for other branches.‘
The high efficiency of the military
intelligence division and the navy in
telligence branch developed during
the war is being continued on a small
er peace time basis, with much secrecy
as to methods. |
Mr. J. A. White Says “If You Have
An Automobile, Keep Rat-Snap.”
“If T knew about. RAT-SNAP last
‘winter would have saved $l2O. My
car was in the garage for a few
weeks during bad weather; when I
went to take it out, found that rats
had eaten great holes in two new
tires. Got them later with RAT
' SNAP.” Three sizes, 3b¢c, 65¢, $1.25.
'Sold and guaranteed by Dawson
Hardware Co. and Crouch Bros.
Age and Experience
The age of a person or a bank does not
count for a great deal unless the years
have been accompanied by broad,
diversified experience. This bank can
not only point to its record of 31 years
establishment but as well to a wide
range of financial service rendered to
the community.
By reason of this experience we are able
to serve you efficiently and compre
hensively. -«
Dawson National Bank
Dawson, Gorgia
c:mmcmis
lEunswg‘
€
PAGE FIVE