Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1921.,
L ———— A
AT $300.00 A COPY
e
ARIS SURGEON SAYS HE CAN
CORRECT MISTAKES AND
RAVAGES OF TIME.
e
PARIS— \t last, lafiies, vou can get
{;a‘l‘i sew face for 3,000 francs
l"wé §3OO at present rate of ex
“‘, i Paris, fhade according to
lfi-b:of the most a‘pproved styles of
iy you may pike.
L‘f\\r \;-ifl it be a makeshift or cam
filg( iob. Your features can actually
%:‘-fn‘;?““]- even if it be necessary
; mould the bony framework of
pe face. S
This can be done by facial surgery
d‘\\ithmif pain—beyond that occa
nd W ihe parting with the $3OO.
‘Ofif“‘ lack Brettmon, one of the
Ut oremost experts in facial sur
fo;“ui“ ,uthority for this statement.
" Hospital for Face “Cures.”
Dr. Brettmon recently opened a hos
il in Paris, w‘here he does nothing
i “make over” old faces, re-endow
g then with their lost youth or re
el young faces, removing facial de
"Ct? ';:.111'“'“ d ])) birth.
\lany European women and a _few
mericans have already been operated
on successfully, according to Dr.
reemol, and many more are placing
obtain new faces in this way dur
g the summer. :
In the heautiful reception room of
s “Hospital of Aesthetics” on Rue
ol Dr. Breemon told a correspond
it his experience correcting the sculp
re of nature and combating the im
ants of years. He is also a sculptor
{ no mean ability. In his studio were
e or four plaster casts dome by
im.
" Learned on Wounded Soldiers.
“partly as a result 'of experiments
¢h wounded men during the war
dal surgery has now reached a
soc where the human face deformed
. maliormation at birth or withered
" fatigue of time can be recut or
cuvenated much as a serviceable but
at of date garment can be remodelled‘
4 imbued with the season’s latest
m..\“ he wh't']arcd. |
“Xo longer does Antoinette need
main a back number because she
apencd to be born with a crooked
ose. She can take a limousine to a.
eauty hospital, look through the nosel
wlogue, pick out a Roman, Greek
r hest American nose, and in less than
week be back in thé opera box with
pretty a member as any girl in the
oise. Many, many girls miss being
vraordinarily beautiful simply thru
diormation of one feature of the
(€.
New noses cost from 1,500 francs
150) up, he said.
ROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. W. H. GARDNER
EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT
GLASSES PRESCRIBED.
Fordsorn
CAREL "
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| Sy Ete] [
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| —=tpmiy; 1 X
!I g sik &8 W 4 s .
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| 170,000 Now 1n Use
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|| Built with over strength in every part; |
| built to withstand the constant strain of
1” heavy duty; tested out under every condl
| tion of farm and beit work, and .put to
|| actual test by 170,000 owners during the
li past three years—the FordsonTragtorhas
| lived up to every claim made for it.
}i No matter what the farm task—whether
Ei plowing, disking, harrovgt;g, thr‘;e;}:gl;:g.
|| baing hay, grinding feed, P
'l‘ water, sawing wood, pulling stumps, fill
il ing silos, or any of the many other jobs
| around the farm, the Fordson will not
” only do and do well, but quicker, easier
t‘ and at less expense.
! There are so many different time and
“ money. saving ways in which the Ford
-I.} son can be used that youowe it to your
{i| self to get the facts. Come In and see
| the Fordson, or write or phone for the
!i! information. .
i
i\
I
i DAWSON MOTOR CAR COMPANY
IS SMUGGLING LIQUOR ON VAST
" SCALE ALONG THE GEORGIA CO{}SM
SAVANNAH, Ga.—lndications that
the federal government is preparing to
open an attack on liquor smuygglers
said to be operating on a large scale
on the coast in the vicinity of Savan
nah are being received.
L‘ While the attention of the country
is being centered on the spectacular
‘seizures of smuggled liquors on the
north Atlantic coast it has been com
imonly reported for months that the
smuggling operations were as heavy
‘if not heavier on the Georgia and Flor
ida coasts than anywhere else in the
‘country, with the exception of the
Canadian border.
No denial of the fact is made that
‘liquor has been coming in throughout
this section in vast quantities for many
months past. An occasional seizure by
BIG COMBINE SLIPPING YEL
LOW MEN INTO FLORIDA.
CONDITIONS ARE EASY.
Chinese are being smuggled into the
United States on a large scale by way
of Cuba and Florida, according to re
ports from the south. Unless prompt
action is taken by authorities at Wash
ington conditions will soon be as bad
in the southern states as they were on
the Mexican border, where it took
five years to stamp out the smuggling
of the yellow men, says Immigration
Inspector Whalen, of Tampa, Fla,, in
whose district much of the smuggling
has been going on.
“We have learned that within the
past .few months almost 75,000 Chi
nese have been landed in Cuba,” says
Whalen. “According to the statements
we got from some of the smuggling
parties that we have rounded up these
Chinese remain in Cuba only long
enough to make arrangements with
the smugglers to be landed on the
Florida coast.
Chinese Well Supplied With Funds.
“The fact that all the Chinese who
have been arrested in this vicinity are
plentifully supplied with money and
are able to obtain unlimited funds to
defray court expenses indicates that
there is a well organized smuggling
combine at work.”
The latest arrests in the smuggling
war were in Charleston, S. C., where
four Chinese were picked up, with
railroad tickets from Clearwater, Fla.,
a short distance from Tampa, to Wash
ington, D. C. Six more were arrested
the same day at Dunedan, Fla,, also
near Tampa. These six were taken
when they tried to buy railroad tickets
to Washington.
The coast of Florida is an ideal
place for smuggling operations, as
there are only a few places along the
entire 1,400 miles of coast line where
schooners cannot make an easy land
ing.
The use of splints for repairing
broken limbs was known to the pre
historic denizens of Arizona, ' .. . .
government raiders has revealed to
some extent the smuggling activities
that were being carried on in the im
mediate vicinity of Savannah. In fact,
the Georgia coast of late has been
spoken of in the interior as the “Bi
mini of the United States.”
The utter impossibility of the fed
eral government stopping the smug
gling is admitted by persons familiar
with the coast and .the network of
waterways through which liquor boats
can enter Georgia and Floriga. Thous
ands of men would have to be employ
ed constantly to effectively shut off
the operations, it is pointed out.
Notwithstanding the difficulties, it
is reliably reported that the govern
ment is to make a determined effort
shortly to break up the smuggline go
ing on along the Georgia coast. :
IWASHINGTON LIFE LURES
| PUBLIC MEN TO POLITICAL
| AND PHYSICAL RUIN.
' WASHINGTON, D. C.—Washing
ton life lures public men t¢ ‘meir po
ilitical, physical and spiritual destruc
!tion, declared Senator Tom Watson,
of Georgia, who was found today in a
philosophic mood.
The Georgian, known from coast: to
coast as a “Fire Eater,” has been
*d?ven from his office by the smoke
of a cigaret, lighted by a caler. Cigar
et smoke, he .explained, made him
sick. Waiting for his room to air, he
walked the capitol corridors and dis
cussed the social evils of the nation’s
capital.
The lives of some of the leaders in
congress during the last quarter cen
tury were used by Watson to illus
trate the snares he described. The
stormy petrel of the cracker state is
taking a ‘“close up” of Washington
with 28 vears of hectic career inter
vening since he was a member of the
house.
“The social system in Washington
tries the souls of public men,” said the
Georgian, gravely shaking his shaggy
mane of iron-gray hair. “It has proved
a lure too strong for some of our ablest
men in years passed.
“With the passing of years the so
cial octopud has grown in cunning. It
is reaching out its tentacles for men
every day. It is seductive and alluring.
That’s the worst of it. The ugly con
sequences are hidden, and men realize
too late. J
“Seeking relaxation from exacting
labors, men find themselves touching
elbows with the influences that lead to
their ultimate destruction. This comes
in many forms and the process is slow
but it is sure to the unwary.
“Tt takes a strong head to withstand
these social draughts. The sensation is
new and pleasant to most men, .but‘
sapping to the strength. Each time
lthey ‘take their pitchers. to the well
they return weaker. L
“If a public man wishes to remain
the master of his vote and the captain
of his soul he will do well to avoid
social life in Washington.”
2 b o ”
Machine Can “Figger
Without Human Aid
German Device Is Automatic. Adds
And Divides at Same Time.
NEW YORK, N. Y.—A new cal
culating machine which not only can
add and subtract, but can multiply
and divide or add and multiply at the
same time as well, was exhibited in
Teachers’ College, Columbia Univer
sity, by Ralph C. Coxhead, of Califor
nia, during the war a captain in the
United States army and a member of
the navy consulting board and of the
inventions section of the advisory
board of the general staff. Mr. Coxhead
is the American agent for a calculat
ing machine company of Berlin, which
has offices in San Francisco.
The machine works automatically
instead of by hand. The inventor is a
German mechanical engineer, Dr. H.
F. Hamon. It is manufactured in Ger
many and is superior to others be
cause it can do more work in less time,
and the operator may be telephoning
while the machine is solving his prob
lem. The answers are always check
ed up by a special contrivance.
ARKANSAS FARMER GROWS
~ CORN ALREADY SHELLED
Curious Vine-Like Growth Produces
‘ Like a Gourd.
' QUITMAN, Ark—T. L. Lester,
who lives six miles east of here, found
a small sack of funny-looking corn in
the middle of the road near his home
last year. He took the corn home, and
next spring planted ten acres of
ground with it. Every grain proved
good so far as he could tell, and the
corn grew rapidly.
Its sturdiness withstood a serious
drought and though the summer was
dry and hot the corn began to silk
early. Instead, however, of forming
dars, the corn began to shoot out a
vine-looking growth. that ended in a
goard on the ground. Soon these fat
green gourds covered the entire ten
acres of ground.
Finally the-vines dried out and Les
ter thought he would investigate the
gourds. Cutting one open one day he
found it full of shelled corn just like
the variety he found in the bag in the
road. Needless to say he has enough
corn now to feed his stock all winter.
. S T
Same Olld Story But a Good One.
Mrs. Mahala Burns, Savanna, Mo,
relates an experience, the like of which
has happened in almost every neigh
borhood in this country, and has been
told and related by thousands of oth
ers, as follows: “I used a bottle of
Chamberlain’s %olic\ and Diarrhoea
Rentedy about hine years ago and it
cured me of flux (dysentery). I hadl
another attack of the same complaint
three or four years ago and a few doses
oi this remedy cured me. I have rec
ommended it to dozens of people since
I first used it and shall continue to do
so, for I know it is a quick and posi
tive cure for bowel troubles.”—adv.
THE DAWSON NEWS
'
SPEAKERS TO COVER EVERY
COTTON PRODUCING COUN
TY. OBJECT EDUCATIONAL.
The state-wide educational campaign
of the Georgia Cotton Growers’ Co
operative Association opened Wednes
(ligy and will®*continue until about Aug.
th.
It is going to be a whirlwind cam
paign—one that will awaken the farm
ers of Georgia to the possibilities of a
permanent co-operative association. It
is predicted that the speakers engag
ed by the association will be able to
cover every cotton county in the state
by the middle of August.
In order to start right Director El
more has scheduled twenty-eight meet
ings in various parts of Georgia for
the first four days of the drive. Chas.
S. Barrett, president of the Georgia
Farmers’ Union; Director Elmore,
Agricultural Commissioner J. J.
Brown and a number of other notable
figures in the farming industry wiil
do .the bulk of the speaking.
The association has hopes of adding
many speakers to its oratorical force
within the next few days.
Other towns in which speakers will
appear during the early part of Aug
ust are Lincolnton, Zebulon, Gaines
ville, Eastman, Metter, Washington,
Cumming, Fayetteville, Wrightsville,
Butler, Alpharetta, Thomson, Jones
boro, LaGrange, Sparta, Monticello,
Summerville, Franklin and Carrollton.
‘ . L]
Central Railroad’s
Peach Business Doubles
Hauled More Than 8,000 Carlodsa.
Brought Growers $7,000,000.
With the close of the peach season
in Georgia, the Central of Georgia
carloads of peaches over their line,
carloads of peaches over their line
which is 100 per cent-increase over the
amount shipped in 1920. Tt is claimed
that top prices have been obtained by
the grower even with the heavy yield
of peaches which have flooded the
markets. The consumer has not suffer
ed and the dealer has made a fair
profit on the peach crop this year, it
is reported.
The peach district which takes in
Byron, Fort Valley, Perry, Marshall
ville and Reynolds all have profited
by the large crop and sale of their
peaches. This district has had success
ful crops for the last twenty-four
years. «
L. A. Downs, vice president of the
Central, says the profit to the railroad
in handling the fruit was comparatively
small, but the $7,000,000 which the
peach crop sohd for throughout the
state more than compensated the road
by having that money left in the state
for circulation.
The department of agriculture at
Washington in a report recently is
sued gives the peach yield as 4,650,000
bushels, which is 851,000 bushels in
excess of last year’s crop.
LIGHTNING KILLS COW
THAT YOUTH IS MILKING
Huddled Up Beside Bedy of Dead
Milker When Found.
MACON, Ga.—A bolt of lightning,
’which killed the cow he was milking,
so affected Chester Burge, 17, Sunday
afternoon that he is today in the Macon
‘hospital slowly recovering from serious
shock.
' The bolt struck, followed by a
downpour of rain, as the boy was milk
ing the cow, and the boy’s uncle rush
ed to his rescue as soon as he noticed
what had happened, for the cow was
lying dead at the boy’s feet and the
milker was huddled unconscious on
the stool.
At the Macon hospital, where he
was taken immediately following the
accident, physicians worked upon him
all night in a desperate effort to save
his life, with prospects of success to
day, for he had regained consciousness.
| Start Tomorrow
. and Keep It Up
| .
Every Morning
A e S AT——
Get In the habit of drinking a
glass of hot water before
{ breakfast. |
1
| iy |
i )
We're not here long, so let’s make
our stay agreeable. Let us live well,
sat well, digest well, work well, sleep
well, and look well. what a glorious
sondition to attain, and yet, how very
easy it is if one will only adopt the
morning inside bath.
Folks who are accustomed to feel
dull and heavy when they arise, split
ting headaghe, stuffy from & cold, foul
tongue, nasty breath, acid.stomach,
can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy
by opening the sluices of the systemn
each morning and flushing out the
whole of the internal poisonous stag
rant matter.
Everyone, whether ailing, sick or
well, should, each morning, before
breakfast, drink a glass of real hot
water with a teaspoonful of limestone
phosphate in it to wash from the
stomach, liver and bowels the previous
Jay’s indigestible waste, sour bile
and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing,
sweetening and purifying the entire
alimentary canal before putting more
tood into the stomach. The action of
hoet water and limestone phosphate on
an empty stomach is wonderfully in
vigorating. It cleans out all the sour
fermentations, gases, waste and
icidity and gives one a splendid
ippetite for breakfast. While you are
enjoying your breakfast the water
and phosphate is quietly extracting
a large volume of water from the
blood and getting ready for 2
thorough flushing of all the inside
organs.
The millions of people .who &are
bothered with constipation, bilious
spells, stomach trouble; others who
have sallow skins, blood disorders and
sickly complexions are urged to gef a
jnarter pound of limestone phosphate
trom the drug store. This will cost
very little, but is sufficlent to make
anyone a pronounced crank on the
subject of inside-bathing before break
fast.
Landis Has Uncovered
The Human Paradox
Discovers Man Who Operates Water
Wagon in Day and Still at Night.
CHICAGO, Ill.—Federal Judge
Landis today uncovered the human
paradox, a man who operates a city
sprinkling cart during the day and
runs an illicit still at night.
James Williams, a person of color,
is the individual who doubles on both
sides of the eighteenth amendment. A
moonshine still had been discovered in
his apartment.
“Where do you live?” asked the
jud%e.
“I'm fohgetful of de zack address,
cap, you honah, but h’its erroun’ Thut
ty-fust an’ State street. H'its de grand
es’ cullud boahding house in de dis
trict.”’
“What do you do besides operating
this still? I mean do you do any reg
ular lawful work?”
“Deed I does, Misto Jedge, f'm
mohnin’ twell night I drives one o’
dem city wattah wagons.”
“Well, Williams,” said the judge,
“when you fall off the water wagon
you fall all the way. I'll give you thir
ty days in the house of correction. And
when you get back to your water
wagon take my advice and lash your
self to the mainmast.” %
MAN CANNOT KISS HIS
- WIFE IN SWIMMING POCL
If a man must kiss his wife, he
should not kiss her in a public swim
ming pool. Matthew Marquard, 30
years old, became affectionate with his
wife, Margaret, 20 years old, in a pool
at North Bergen, N. J., and appeared
in court on a disorderly conduct
charge. '
W
DRINK HOT TEA 1
FOR A BAD COLD
Get a small package of Hamburg
Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a
tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of
boiling water upon it, pour through a
sieve and drink a teacup full at any
time during the day er before retiring.
It is the most effective way to break a
cold and cure grip, as it opens the
pores of the skin, relieving congestion.
Also loosens the bowels, thus driving &
cold from the system.
Try it the next time you suffer from
a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive
and entirely vegetable, therefore safe
and harmless.
ey e SRS
Rub Pain and Stiffness away with
a small bottle of old honest
Bt. Jacobs oil
When your back is sore and lame or
lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has
you stiffened u¥, don't suffer! Get a
35 cent bottle of old, honest “St. Jacobs
0il” at any drug store, pour a little
in your hand and rub.it right into
the pain or ache, and by the time you
count fifty, the soremess and lameness
is gone. .
Don’t stay crippled! This soothing,
penetrating oil needs to be used only
once. It takes the ache and Eun right
out of your back and ends the misery.
1 is magical, yet absolutely harmless
and doesn’t burn the skin. :
Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica
and lame back misery so promptly!
reall
¢
Q =Theyrea
&NE One Price!
) F ne rrice!
AW s2Bc
Ir ' '
/ WE HAVE ABOUT TWENTY DIFFERENT
, | FASHION MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM
‘ ‘ : For Fine All Wool Two Piece
-H M- SUITS TO ORDER
i | Full Suit or Overcoat, $32.50
9
THEY’RE ALL WOOL
300 distinctive fabrics to choose from—
none over $28.50 for a two piece suit or
$32.50 for a full suit or overcoat.
Every conceivable color, pattern and weave is here.
Fancy worsteds, serges, cassimeres, unfinished worst
eds, in checks, plaids, stripes, etc. You’'ll find patterns
here that other tailors ask as high as $5O for.
o "’ Uy
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Pllam g 1 e
A % P " e ’! = S N\
b ‘;\‘kfi'/w‘i B V o ”i-‘“ 'I:.
b \\:\\“\&\\‘\;l\\...(;“. ; ’ ;K:Vy-flt S
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- e
- - - SYSTEM
Enough to Weather
Any Storm
IT is in time of business readjustment that the
real value of a bank foundation is shown.
Our Resources have been conserved in prosperous
days for just such a readjustment period as this
and with the added advantage of our Membership
in the Federal Reserve System we are better
equipped to serve you now than ever,
Dawson, Ga.
NOTICE!
( We have sold our interest in the Dawson Sea Food
Co., and have built us a little store at our home on
West Seventh avenue, and will devote our entire time
to raising vegetables, where you will be able to get
fresh vegetables gathered and delivered every day.
( We have a few vegetables now ready, such as field
peas, ‘snap beans, new sweet potatoes, sweet peppers,
egg plants, collards, etc. We will appreciate your
support and will please you.
( We have established our trade name as—
MILLER’S
Truck Farm Store
Phone 128. Call us.
211 W. Seventh Avenue Dawson, Ga.
PAGE SEVEN