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TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1920
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John N. Holder, Speaker of the House of Representatives
and Candidate for Governor. -
I.—John Holder is a successful
tarmer and business man. He is
well qualified to give the State a
REAL business administration.
2—John Holder has had nine
teen years’ experience in handling
every phase of Georgia’s legislative
affairs. Through this experience
be has gained the widest possible
knowledge of Georgia's conditions
and needs.
s.—John Holder’s executive abil
ity has been put to the test in his
eight years' service as speaker of
the House of Representatives. He
has proven himself: There has
never been an appeal from one of
bis decisions.
7.—John Holder is FAIR. He
is eminently fair always, allke to
griend or foe. There is not one of
bis enemies who will deny his
fairness in any transaction of his
life. His record as speaker fully
demonstrates this fact.
9—John Holder is a construc
tive servant g[ the state. He has
shown this in his" every effort.
Without blare of trumpets he has
gone ahead building up Georgia’'s
schools, institutions and highways,
and working day and night for the
solution of her financial problems.
11.—John Holder is a-loyal, all
wool and a yard wide Democrat.
He has been a loyal Democrat all
his life. He is standing “four
square” by the party in the big
fight which confronts it this year.
18.—John Holder, during the 19
years he has been a member of the
General Assembly, has served the
State practically without compen
sation. The per diem paid to. mem
bers is not sufficient to meet the
expenses of their stay in Atlanta.
Vote for John Holder for Governor on September 8. Your
vote will be appreciated. =
' “SHORT CUT TO HEREAFTER”
Warning Issued Against Using Gasoline for Cleaning House.
Sure Method to Join Heavenly Choir.
“Put two gallons of gasoline and
two ounces of solvite soap in a wash
boiler or large dishpan and do your
iry cleaning at, home” is the deadly
advice of the manufacturers of sol
vite, a gasoline soap,”’ says a warn
ing just issued.
“‘Puat three quart of gasoline in a
deep pail with a heaping teaspoonful
of borax. Put mop in and soak over
night. In the morning wash mop in
fasoline, let dry’ is the equally dan-
Zerous advice of another on cleaning
mops.
" ‘Dissolve a bar of good white soap
M a quart of hot water, add one pint
of gasoline and one tablespoonful of
ammoenia. Mix thoroughly. Serub
smzll area of rug with stiff brush dip
ved in this paste. Serape up lather
With a broad putty knife and wipe
with damp cloth’ is the vicious adVlcg
¢f a third on rug cleaning at home.
These three, and such as there are
short and sure methods to join the
heavenly choir,
Order the doctor, nurse, coroner,
undertaker and fire department in ad-
Vance. :
. Cleaning gloves or fabrics in gaso-
Ine indoors, or spraying bedroom fur-
Nture with gasoline to exterminate
zermm are equally "dangerous prac
-Ices. *
2.—His opponents are neither
farmers nor business men; and
they view conditions from the legal,
instead of the business standpoint.
4—Neither of his opponents
has had anything like this state
legisiative experience. Therefore,
neither of them possesses the same
intimate knowledge of Georgia af
fairs and conditions.
6.—Neither of his opponents has
had this actual executive experi
ence. Neither of them has ren
dered any executive service.
Neither of them has shown ability
in bringing about concord between,
and in satisfying, disputants.
B.—The same cannot be said of
at least one of his opponents, who
is basing his campaign almost
wholly upon bitter attacks upen
well-known Georgians who de not
happen to agree with him. Fair
ness can never come from vituper
ation. . \
10.—One of his opponents has a
long record of critical destructive
ness of opposing and tearing
down, where others have tried to
build. The record of the other is
negative: while he may not have
attempted to destroy, there is noth
ing which he has built.
12.—1 t is well known that one of
his opponents has repudiated the
Democratic administration, and
even now criticises its platform
adopted at San Francisco. He is
running as a Democrat, and vet op
poses the Democratic platform.
14—During practically all of
these years both of his opponents
have held lucrative offices, one of
them for 16 years and the other
for 20. In these offices they have
earned a competent living, while
Mr. Holder has been put to actual
personal expense in the service
he has rendered to the State.
During all three operations the
gasoline constantly evaporates and the
fumes mix with the air. Being near
ly three times heavier than air they
flow along the floor like a stream of
water, lodging in the low places per
haps fifty feet away from their source.
The explosive force of this mixture is
fourteen times greater than dynamite.
The tiny drop of gasoline evaporated
and exploded by an electric spark pro
pels the heaviest truck.
A spark from a horseshoe or an
iron tool, a match, an open light, grate,
stove or furnace will explode this
death dealing mixture.
You can not see this creeping foe
on the floor, nor foresee the spark
which may set it off to destroy life
and property. Your only safeguard
is not to use gasoline indoors at all,
and to store what gasoline you have
in an evaporation proof container.
| o Re AR
?
When Your Farm Stock Is Sick, Look
2 o For Rats,
Ditease among farm animal’s don’t
just happen. Rats are carriers of
dangerous plagues—hog cholera,
foot and mouth disease and that ter
rible of all scourges—Bubonic plague.
Farmers should throw around prem
ises RAT-SNAP. It’s sure and safe.
Three sizes, 35¢, 65¢, $1.25. Sold
and guaranteed by Dawson Hardware
Co. and Crouch Bros.
ANIMALS HAVE AN
APARTMENT HOUSE
High cost of building material
and lack of accommodations for
mere man were no deterrents to
F. D. Stringham, of Berkeley,
Cal., who, out of consideration
for his pets, built the animals a
fine apartment house. The pres
ent' tenants are apparently well
satisfied, as to date they have
registered no complaints.
The house has four apart
ments, the two on the ground
floor being occupied by A. Bea
gle and Mr. Irish Setter and
one on the upper floor by Miss
Persian Cat. The apartment
idjoining Miss Cat’s is said to be
the only vacancy 4t present.
- This is the ideal apartment
house life, the meals being serv
ed from the Stringham kitchen,
doing away with the servant
problem for the tenants.
BAILEY’S VOTE BLOW |
TO WILSON REGIME
FORMER TEXAS SENATOR WIN-i
NING SUCCESS BY ATTACK- |
* ING THE PRESIDENT. i
AUSTIN, Texas.—The success at-‘
tained by former Sepator Joseph W.!
Bailey in his race For governor ofl
Texas is considered a direct slap at
the Wilson administration. In thel
first state primary the administra
tion was made the chief issue, and'
Bailey, bitter and uncompromising in |
his criticism of the men who havefl
shaped the national policies of the
party for the last eight years, led’
Pat M. Neff, his nearest opponent,
by about 10,000 votes. Bailey is |
‘making his campaign on the dual}
platform of anti-Wilsonism and an |
open shop labor policy.in Texas. |
: Final Test in Week. l
August 28 the run-off primary be- |
tween Bailey and Neff will be held.
The fight is now between them for
the division of the approximately
160,000 votes which were cast in
the July primary for Robert E.
Thomason and B. F. Looney, the
third and *fourth candidates. Who
ever can swing the votes of the:
Thomason supporters will win. It is
predicted that the majority of those
who vote(lfi for Thomason will turn
to the Bailey ranks. i
The colorful personality of “Joe”
Bailey injects a touch of the dra
matic into the fight. It is douhtful|
if there ever has been a man who
could arouse the people of the south-l
west as much as Bailey. It was a
long time ago that he first became
a power in Texas, and he was only
a lanky youngster of 28 when he“
entered congress in all his pictur
esque glory. |
Bailey Has Many Enemies.
There have been just two classes
of people in Texas since Bailey be
came a power; those who believed
he was the greatest statesman in
the world and those who hated him
with ap unforgivable venom. With
these two factions opposing one an
}other the strenuous days of 1908,
' when Bailey men threatened to run
the anti-Bailey men into the Gulf
of Mexico, and vice versa, is recall
ed.
The success won by Bailey dur
ing the last year has been both a
personal and political comeback.
When he left the United States sen
ate Jan. 2, 1913, he announced that
he intended to retire forever from
political life. He built a beautiful
new home in Washington, but main
tained a legal residence in Texas.
His acknowledged standing and
ability as a lawyer on subjects af
fecting the constitution insured him
a leisurely but profitable practice.
Caused Sensation on Return.
Until last summer it was openly
declared that ‘“Joe’’ Bailey could
never be elected to office again, that
his old supporters had deserted him,
and that he knew he was through so
far as ever wielding political influ
ence was concerned. Much of this
talk must have reached Bailey. He
stood it until last summer, and then
he went back to the place of his
former triumphs and caused a sen
sation the first day he arrived in the
state.
He issued a statement in which
he told the neople that Woodrow
Wilson was not the Messiah; that
the league of nations in which-they
had believed with such unanimity|
was based upon. a non-American |
doctrine of internationalism; that|
“Poctor”’ Wilson, as he called him,
had shown alarming tendencies to
ward a species of socialism; that the
administration had granted danger
ous concessions to the labor unions;
that the demoecratic party had
strayed a long way from the prin
ciples of Jefferson, and that ke had
returned to restore a veneration for
the constitution. .
ROYS PLAY WITH A 25
THOUSAND DOLLAR MATCH
Cotton in Storage Room of a Colum
bus Mill Is Burned.
COLUMBUS, Ga.—Loss of over
§25,000 was incurred Friday night
when two small boys, each under 7
vears of age, set fire to one of the
large storage warehouses of the
Hamburger Cotton Mills, Officials
declared more than 200 bales of cot
ton were burned or badly damaged
by fire and water.
In view of the age of the boys
no criminal proceedings will be in
sittuted, It is said the youngsters
ignited several matches in the large
storehouse, endangering hundreds of
bales of cotton:
ARL e
DIAMONDS AT $5 A CARAT
One hundred and fifty years ago,
when Brazilian stones were poured
on the market, first quality dia
monds sold as low as $5 a carat.
e i
666 HAS MORE IMITATIONS
THAN ANY OTHER CHILL AND
FEVER TONIC ON THE MARKET,
BUT NO ONE WANTS ll&l‘l‘A
TIONS. THEY ARE DANGE ous
THINGS IN THE MEDICINE LINE.
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BEN H. HILL
Will Be Elected Judge of the
Court of Appeals
By a seven years service on that
bench and five years service on the
Superior Court Bench of Fulton
County he established a record
second to no judge in the State’s
Listory.
Judge Wade, Chief Judge of the
said Court of Appeals, declared that
Judge Hill’'s opinions appearing in
the thirteen volumes of the Appeals
Report “are characterized by learn
ing and abillty and are of great serv
ice to the bench and the bar,” His
own qualifications for service on this
bench and the fact that he is the
only son and namesake of Georgia's
great statesman, lawyer and patriof
who is still remeéembered and loved by
the people will insure his overwhelm
ing election.
Ben Hill Campaign Committee.
BIRDS BUILD NEST
|
IN DOBBIN'S MANE
I
—_— ‘é
AGED NAG PROVIDES GOOD SITE
FOR HOME OF CHIRPING OUT- '
FIT OF SPARROWS. i
NEW HAMPTON, llowa.—Dobbin,
the old family horse helonging to Clif- |
ton Myers, a farmer living a few |
miles south of here, is the equine hero |
of the birds about these parts since a
family of sparrows has been reared
in a nest huilt in his heavy mane. The |
little birds have been hatched out now
and Myers has combed the nest out
of the old nag’s mane and kept it
for a souvenir of the unusual event.
For more than a score of years
Dobbin was the servant and friend of
the Myers family. In his youth he
drew the plows and cultivators that
put the crop into shape. After he
got a little too old for that sort of
work he was used by the women as a
safe and sure, even if slow, horse to
take them to market. Then when the
family invested in an automobile Dob
bin was relegated to the children to
play with. For several years he was
their faithful old friend and compan
ion.
l But the kiddies soon arrived at the
bicyele age, so Dobbin was put out in
the pasture to end his days in peace.
He soon became very stiff and crip
pled up from old ege and used to
tspend long hours gazing motionless
over the fence.
It was about that time that Myers
noticead that the sparrows seemed to
be very friendly with the old nag.
| They were continually flying to and
from his back.
l “One -day,” said Myers, “I saw a
Eparrow making trips back and forth,
carrying wisps of grass and straw. I
suspected what was up, S 0 I went over
and examined. .
MIXTURE THAT WILL KEEP
FLIES OFF LIVE STOCK
Ingredients Are Laundry Soap, Wa
ter, Crude Petroleum, Naphthalin.
The following mixture is very ef
fective in keeping flies off live stock
and its cost is very small:
One pound of common laundry
soap, four gallons of warm water,
one gallon of crude petroleum and
four ounces of powdered naphtha
lin.
Shave the soap in very thin slices
into warm water and stir it ‘until
thoroufhly dissolved. Put the naph
thalin in the crude petroleum and
stir until dissolved. Pour the soap
and water into the petroleum and
thoroughly mix them together.
In olden days people used to boil
snails in barley water as a cure for
a cough.
NEW l
READY TO WEAR
New Style, Latest Patterns
* s3sto $5O |
AT i
HERMAN’S
e
GV S 5 ys
EATONIC
E
Instantll.y relieves Heartburn, Bloat
ed Gassy Feeling. Stops food souring,
esing, o e s
sweet and strong. Increases Vitality and Pep.
B ELDNCT ebt et
or two a day to use it.’ Positively guaranteed
£ plasge o ye il etand maney. Gets be
e f
REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS
NEED MONEY TO PUT MEN
ACROSS. METHODS DIFFER.
The raising of finances to further
the candidacies of their respective
standard bearers is now occupying the
attention of both the Republican and
Democratic national committees, rei
ther of which. have their campaign
finances in any too good condition.
The Republicans, many meinbers of
the party and Democrats feel, made
a big mistake when they committed
themselves to $l,OOO as the limit of
the contributions. No such limit will
affect the Democrats, as they can take
any sums they please, but Wilbur
March, democratic national treasurer,
declares the democrats will reserve
the right to refuse contributions from
sources not deemed sufficiently disin
terested.
Republicans May Need Small Sums.
The Republicans will find it a much
harder task to get 5,000 persons to
contribute $l,OOO apiece than it is to
get 50,000 people to give $lOO each,
it is predicted. The first must be ac
complished by individual canvass and
the second might be collected through
a small organization. Before Octo
ber, many are predicting, the Repub
licans will make a general appeal for
funds of any size, large or small.
The Domoerats may use the same
system which they successfully put in
to operation when confronted with a
deficit after the 1916 campaign. Chain
letters asking for small contributions
were written. Five men would be
asked for small sums, for instance, and
each requested to send in the name of
five other persons who might be inter
ested in contributing equal amounts.
The Democrats acquired a mailing list
of about 300,000 names in that man
ner and collected nearly $2,000,000.
GIANT POCKET KNIFE.
A policeman of New Britain,
Conn., has completed what is be
lieved to be the largest pocket knife
in the world. It is six feet sevem
inches long when opened, and three
feet two and one-half inches when‘
closed. The blades are six inches‘
wide. |
666
(}il\.f-c;: Quick Relief for
- COLDS and
LAGRIPPE
RACINE
CORD TIRES
Extra Tested for Extra Miles
Buy tires you know are right.
Racine Tires—Multi-Mile
Cord and Country Road Fabric
—are Extra Tested to yield Ex<ra
Miles. Racine Absorbing Shock
Strip welds tread and carcass
perfectly the industry’s
D Buick Company
Dawson, Georgia - ,
¥ 3 =-" S 0 e..‘ % ‘:' Ry " : 6
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Dietz Lanterns
‘ The World's |
Best | |
Large shipment
just received
Battle Hardware Co.
Dawson, Georgia
G. M. ROBERTS J. H. FLETCHER
REAL ESTATE
RENTING AND;LOANS
Dawson, Georgia
We have listed some very desirable property
both in town and country. It will pay you to see us
before making a deal. Our office is on Main Street
in the G. M. Roberts Motor Co. building.
greatest mile-making feature.
Racine Tires are extra quality
tires—that’swhy they are econ
omy tires for car owners every
where. Be sare every tire you
buy bears the name
Racine Rubber Co., Racine, Wis.
PAGE SEVEN