Newspaper Page Text
LUESDAY, JANuA‘nY 11, 192+
M
10 HELP FARMER
ket
' QUICKLY OVERRIDES
pNATS OVER
pRESIDENT BY AN ER
wHELMING VOTE.
.__—-—'—'__ .
D
VED BY UNDERWOO
o L
BB ihcrn Democrats and Western Re
pußlicans Join to Revive Credit Plan.
Bitter Assaults or} By Both Demo
crats and Republicans. _
W \SHINGTON, D. G—THhe reso
ition to revive the war finance corpo
,;Ym: was 1135509 by the senate over
resident Wilson's veto. :
The vote was taken immediately
tiar th prc,sidcm'§ veto message was
1 pullifving action which was. de
¢ d to aid farmers and others in the
I 8 cent period of declining prices. The
LL“ in the senate was 53 to 5. Senator
mderwood made the motion to over
ide the veto. ‘Both Georgia senators
oted tO override the presu?ent. :
Supporting the president’s opposi
ion were two democrats, Senators
~orry, of Rhode Island, and Thomas,
: Colorado, and three republicans,
kins and Sutherland, of West Vir
inia, and Keyes, of New Hampshire.
enators Glass, democrat, Virginia,
nd Edge, republican, 'New Jersey,
oted but withdrew their votes on ac
ount of having pairs. Senator Pen~
ose. of Pennsylvania, a republican
cader, was paired, but announced that
e would have voted to sustain the
0.
: House Fellows Sent.
The vote in the house to pass the
Leasure over the president’s veto was
50 to 66. Seventeen democrats and
o republicans voted to sustain the
00, The Georgia delegation voted
vith the majority to pass the measure
wer the veto. 1
Tts passage was effected through a
oalition of southern democrats and
ostern republicans, all representatives
i agr tural belts. |
he president said he vetoed the
neasure because It would “exert no
eneficial” results and would ‘raise
alse hopes” and would interfere with‘
he “natural and orderly processes of
usiness and finance.” ‘
The time has come when “the na
ion should resume its usual business‘
methods,” President Wilson declared.}
He said he is in sympathy with the |
demand for less interference with bus-]
iness by the government, which has
been demanded during recent months.
The president declared that the res- |
olution passed by congress would be
more heneficial to the banks than it
would be to the farmers. He advocated
that business take steps for relief
through private agencies and not
through the government. |
“The return to stable business” de
pends on individual intelligence and en
terprise rather than on the govern
ment, the president declared.
Bitterly Assailed. I
In debate preceding the vote the
president was bitterly assailed for hisl
actior ¢t the burden of the assault
on the executive branch of the govern—l
ment was directed at Secretary of the
Ireasury Houston, who “was accused
of dictating the president’s action and
of practically writing: the veto mes-
The assaults that have been direct—l
ed at both the president and his sec
retary of the treasury in this ma.tter‘
hay en unpartisan in character, the
democrats joining the republicans in
1 itterest attacks made upon a 1
branch of government in recent years.
\pplication. of the measure is dis- |
cretionary with Secretary Houston,
;:t d mmpeachment proceedings are pre- |
; it he fails to comply with the
aWw \
|
The Camera Man Was
Not in On This Scene
Dorothy Gish and Constance Tal
madge Elope and Get Married.
NEW YORK ‘N ¥V -l4g af
filmland’s most popular stars, Dorothy
Gish and Constance Talmadge, éloped
to Greenwich, Conn,, last Sunday qfld
were married without a single moving
picture camera to click out the scene.
Miss Gish married James Rennie, who
plays Pancho in “Spanish Love,” and
Miss Talinadge married John Pialog
lou, a Greek tobacco importer of Lib
€rty street.
pince Sunday both Miss Gish and
Miss Falmadge have been living with
their mothers at the Savoy hotei, while
their husbands have continued to in
habit their bachelor apartments, and
although Mrs, Gish was inclined to
smile and make the best of the inva-
Slon of the Gish family by Mr. Rennie,
whom she, likes very much, Mrs. Tal
madge wasg very much upset. =
- ST
EXCHANGE SEATS SELL
AT HIGHEST PRICE IN 1920
Cost Range Is From $115,000 to $77,-
500 at the Close.
>tats on the New York Stock Ex
change solq during 1920 for their high
eSt.brices in the history of that insti
| tution, The high record of $115,000
- Was established early in the year—on
| January 15__and oo that time to the
| Close of the year of recession.was grad
- ual unti] the day before Christmas,
i lwhm. sale of one for s77,soo—the
owest mark of the year—was record
ed. Even at that low point, however,
the price at the close’of 1920 was high
& than ever before in -the history- of
tlu exchange excepting 1919, when
1¢ prices ranged between $68,000 and
$llO,OOO.
- :
WHEN BASTING ROAST.
”‘\ tablespoon of sugar added to the
Water used 108 basting roast meats
will give a rich, brown éolar as well
35 a nice flavor to the gravy.
.
Money back without question g“
' HUNT'S Saive faits tn the o)
Evcuors sem e L)
Rt gl
LEE’S DRUG STORE.
e e b s e et
Human Ear Drum Able to Record
Slight Tone, An Illinois Scientist
Anngunces. '
CHICAGO.—An index of the sene
sitiveness of the human ear drum
was reported by the Wallace Clem
ents Sabine laboratory of Geneva,
111, before the American Associa
tion for the Advancement of Science
in a paper announced Thursday
night. Experiments in this labora
tory showed that the amount of en
ergy consumed by the vibration
producing a tone that the ear can
just detect is about one billion-bil
lionth of the energy consumed in an
ordinary -light bulb.
COMMISSIONERS OF
'EVEN STIPEND ALLOWED THE
PAU{’ERS .DOESN’'T ESCAPE
. RETRENCHMENT MOVE. '
_AMERICUS, Ga.—The first act of
the county commissioners this year
was to order drastic cuts in the sala
ries of all county employes and in
their own salaries. John B. Ansley,
county chaingang superintendent, who
is also county highway engineer, was
reduced from $5OOO per annum to
$4,500. George O. Marshall, county
farm demonstration agent, was reduc
ed from $125 per month to $75; Sam
H. Edge, cattle inspector, had his sal
ary cut from $lOO to $25 per month,
while all employes of the county road
department had their salaries cut 20
per cent. Elbert Stallworth, negro
farm demonstrator, was eliminated
from the payroll altogether.
Even the paupers felt the effect of
the spirit of retrenchment evidenced
by the commissioners, those hereto
fore given $5 per month being reduc
ed to $4, and those formerly receiving
$3 being cut to $2.
Big Christmas Meal Resulted in 35,000
Tons of Turkey Alone Being Eat -
: en by the People of America.
The national Christmas- dinner cost
at least $100,000,000, it is estimated at
Washington.
Approximately 70,000,000 pounds of
turkey was served, turkey averaged
about 65 cents a pound throughout the
United States, and this item alone runs
the cost up approximately to $45,000,-
000. Cranberries, mince pies and oth
er “fixings” account for the remain
der.
OFFICERS HAVE FRUSTRATED
HUGE COUNTERFEIT PLOT
A $1,000,000 counterfeit plot to flood
the cities of the middle west with
bogus money was frustrated by federal
officers who' raided two plants, one in
Chicago and the other in Detroit.
The discovery of the plot came with
the arrest of George F. Choate and
T. B. Tyler during a police roundup
in Chicago. The officers seized $20,000
in bogus bills in Chicago and $BO,OOO
in counterfeit money in Detroit.
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TR A R DS R L P TR ES R
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SSR R e AR TR R RRS
The Most Popular Tractors, Plows and Tillage Implements,
YOU know these trade names. Your father and grandfather knew most of
them. They knew in their time and you know today, through long usage
and satisfactory service, that there are no better farm machines and implements
made than those bearing these trade names, which are guarantees of high quality
and operating efficiency.
McCormick built the first practical reaper; Deering sold the first twine
binder and introduced binder twine. Wm. Parlin and the founders of the
Chattanooga line were among the earliest plow pioneers. The lines started by
these famous manufacturers have been constantly growing since their beginnings
and every new machine and implement that has ‘been added has had built into
t the accumulated experience and farm knowledge acquired by the original
founders and their successors. |
' And now, these time-honored, service renowned lines have all been merge
to one--the International Harvester—-the cream of the farm machine world. Ani—
We Have Contracted for the Full International Line -
What Does This Mean to You as a Farmer?
It means, first of all, that you can buy any machine or
implement you may need from one concern—us—with
out taking chances on experiments Or implements that
might be “orphaned’” one or two years after you buy
them because of the manufacturer going out of business.
You can always get repairs for any machine or imple
ment in the International line, because the Harvester
Company will never go out of business.
LOIOPANnY Wikl BEVE: sVe T . o eR A )
Tack this advertisement up in your machine shed so that whenever you need repairs for any of your International Machines you "ill
know, without wasting time, where to go for GENUINE INTERNATIONAL REPAIRS. We handle repairs for the complete International
line. Also, you will know where to go when you are in the market for new machines and implements of real quality.
3 Dawson, Georgia
REPORTED AT THE OFFICE
OF PRISON COMMISSION
IN ATLANTA.
FORSYTH, Ga—ln the month of
May, 1920, A. K. Knox, white, sent
up for-ten years for robbing an At
lanta drug store, escaped {from the
Monreé county road gang after hav
ing served twenty-one months. No
trace of Knox had been discovered
until late Monday afternoon, when ke
arrived in Forsyth from Atlanta and
went to the office of J. H. Phinazee,
chairman of the board of county com
missioners, and stated that he was
ready to take up again the serving of
his sentence. ’
Knox was well dressed and showed
evidence of prosperity. He ‘stated that
during his period of freedom he had
served part of the time as a member
of the detective force in St. Louis.
He said that even though he was do
ing well he could not be content so
long as his sentence remained unserv
ed; so he went to Atlanta and stated
his case to the prison board. He was
then reassigned to the Monroe coun
ty camp and given a letter from the
board in order that he might not be
arrested before reaching there.
Knox came to Forsyth unaccom
panied, but stated he was somewhat
nervous when he reached here, as
there was a $5O reward for his arrest
and it was with some mis¥j.,uing that
hé passed the town marshal and sher
iff on his way to Mr. Phinazee’s of
fice.
Straws Will Be Worn
~ By Girls Next Summer
Flapper Hat Will Be an Actual Flow
er Garden, Both Large and Small.
NEW,_ YORK.—The flappers are
going back to the floppers when sum
mer comes again, Such was the an
nouncement this morning of Mme.
Juliett Nicols, a pretty and petite mil
liner, who has a house here and one
in Paris, and who arrived today on
the French liner La Savoie.
“Straw hats are going to be the
headgear for the girls next year,” she
said, “and especially is the floppy hat
going to be much in vogue. But the
straws will be little ones and big ones
and will have much trimming and
fowers. In fact, the head of the aver
age summer hat will be a veritable
flower garden.”
BULL THAT COST $lOO,OOO
. IS SOLD FOR SUM OF $l,lOO
“The greatest advertised bull in the
world,” Ragapple Korndyke VIII, that
sold about two years ago for $lOO,OOO
at a New York fancy stock sale, was
sold a few days ago to David Stein, of
Capron, IIL, for $l,lOO.
“It Looked Like a Battlefield in Eu
roupe,” Said Mr. C. Dunster.
“Was staying at a hoted in a small
Pennsylvania town. Early one morn
ing I ‘went to the stable to hire a rig
;and was shown a pile of dead rats kill
ed with RAT-SNAP the night before.
Tooked like a battlefield in Europe.”
‘Three sizes, 25¢c, 50c, $l.OO. Sold and
guaranteed by Dawson Hardware Co.
and Crouch Bros.
THE DAWSON NEWS
Alcohol For Fuel to
Be Made From Comn
Engineers Predict Large Quantities
Of Crop Will Be Thus Utilized.
CHICAGO.—Corn belters may not
have to worry much longer about the
lower prices of corn, for engineers see
possibilities of using large quantities
of this crop in the oroduction of al
cohol for fuel. They .predict that the
time may come within the next few
years when the corn fields may be en
listed to aid the oil fields in production
of fuel to run farm machinery and au
tomobiles. 4
‘At the closing session today of a
three-day convention of the American
Society of Agricultural Engineers, A.
H. Gilbert, chairman of the tractor
committee, said that consumption of
fuel used in gasoline engines now ex
ceeds the production.
Engineers claim that 2.6 gallons of
pure alcohol can be made from a
bushel of good corn.
5000 ACTORS AND ACTRESSES
IDLE IN NEW YORK ALONE
In Last Four Months More Than 30
Companies Have Failed on Road.
NEW YORK.—Five thousand ac
¢ors and actresses are unemployed in
this city and many other are stranded
at distant points, victims of wide
spread failure of road companies dur
ing the past year. >
JUST 236 PERSONS
CLAIMED 5 DOLLAR BILL
A $5 bill was advertised as found by
the police department of Berkeley,
Cal. In two days 236 persons claimed
own®ship.
Use the Old-time Sage Tea and
Sulphur and Nobody
Will know.
Gray hair, however handsome, de
notes advancing age. We all know
the advantages of a youthful appear
ance. Your hair is your charm. It
makes or mars the face. When it
fades, turns gray and looks streaked,
just a few applications of Sage Tea
and Sulphur enhances its appearance
a hundred-fold.
Don’t stay gray! Look young!
Either prepare the recipe at home or
get from any drug store a bottle of
“Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com
pound,” which is merely the old-time
recipe improved by the addition of
other ingredients. Thousands of folks
recommend this ready-to-use prepara
tion, because it darkens the hair beau
tifully, besides, no one can possibly
tell, as it darkens so naturally and
evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft
brush with it, drawing this through
the hair, taking one small strand at
& time. By morning the gray hafir
disappears; after another application
or two, its natnral color is restored
and it becomes thick, glossy and lus
trous, and you appear years younger
Wyeth’s .Sage and Sulphur Com
pound is a delightful tollet requisite
It is not intended for the cure, mitl
gation or prevention of disease.
International
NMcCormick
"Deering
P. & O. *
Chattanooga
And you don’t have to go to the bother and expense
of trying to get repairs and repair service from half a
dozen or more different companies. You won't be tak
ing chances on expensive delays waiting for repairs dur
ing your busy seasons, because we are going to carry a
big stock of repairs on hand, and any extra that we might
not have in stock at any time can be secured ina hurrz
by a phone call to the International Harvester branc
house. ;
I o, Rl e CHLCT S i e Bl ...:II
Ear , ; e
Enliem of Satifction y - Emblem of Satefecton
i 7=
| TOU can depend on Buick for a . / |/ /G /
full day’s work every day. Equip- SR
ped with the Buick Valve-in-Head o :
motor, Buick operates with the N i
sturgimess and economy imiportant ,’{f'il M‘ ”m
| affairs demand. 4 f'} “, b
| | Al N
! The new Buick Nineteen Twenty 2 *\: i n
One models are beautiful as well as v Y
dependable and are roomy and com- S -
fortable as well as powerful. w\ Jfl"}“
Wherever Jrou travel, you will find fi\r" ' ,
Authorized Buick Service. w}) \ .sgflg i
£ ; 4 A i ;1"‘ !
Effective January 1, regular : G i g :J’
equ/i;)ment on all models }}fl e | j.f‘
will include cord tires - A ,{”l‘«"‘ ik /-
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DAWSON BUICK CO.
DAWSON, GEORGIA .
m T ee e e St
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM
. - .‘/!7!:;.|~‘ A
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SYor ey A N Y| |
3 £y - t NP,
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The Complete International Harvester Line.
Grain Harvesting
Machines.
Binders
Tractor Binders
Push Binders ~
Headers
Harvester-Thrashers
Rice Binders
Reapers
Shockers
Thrashers
Haying Machines.
Mowers
Sulky Dump Rakes
Side Delivery Rakes
Tedders
Com. Side Rakes
and Tedders :
Hay Loaders
Sweep Rakes
Stackers
Com. Sweep Rakes
and Stackers
Bailing Presses
Bunchers
Corn Machines.
Corn Drills
Planters . :
Combined Corn and
Cotton Drills
Walking Listers
Wide-tread Listers
Tractor Listers
Two-horse Cultivators
Two-row Cultivators
Lister Cultivators
Motor Cultivators
Binders
Corn Machines (Con.)
Ensilage Cutters
Pickers
Huskers and Shredders
Shellers
Beet Tools
Beet and Bean Dirills
Cultivators
Pullers
Seeding Machines
Cotton Planters
Plain Grain Drills
Fertilizer Grain .Drills
Broadcast Seeders
Narrow-track Seeders
Wide-track Seeders
End-%ate Seeders
Alfalfa and Grass Drills
Hemp Drills
On_e-gorse Wheat Drill
Fertilizer and Lime
Sowers
Tillage Implements
Tractor Plows
Tractor Grub-breakers
Riding Plows
Walking Plows
Hillside Plows
Subsoil Plows A
Two-way Plows
Disk Plows
Disk Harrows
Reversible Disk Har
rows
Tandem Disk Harrows
Tillage Implements
(Cont.)
Leverless Tractor Disk
Harrows :
Orchard Harrows -
Spring-tooth Harrows
Peg-tooth Harrows
Com. Spring and Peg
tooth Harrows
One-horse Cultivators
Culti-packers (Soil Pul
verizers)
Power Machines
Kerosene Engines
Gasoline Engines -
Kerosene Tractors
Motor Trucks
Other Farm
Equipment
Cream Separators
Farm wagons
Farm Trucks
Grain Tank wagon
Boxes .
Manure Spreaders
Straw-spreading At
tachments
Stalk Cutters
Feed Grinders
Stone Burr Mills :
Knife Grinders .
Tractor Hitches
Cane Mills
Syrup Evaporators
Evaxorator Furnaces
Binder Twine
PAGE FIVE