Newspaper Page Text
PERSONAL
PARAGRAPHS
Mr. Abe Kruger is 14 Atianta today
on business for the Fair Store,
Miss Lucille Wingate is the week
end guest of Master Asa Smith Jr.
b Mr. J. L. McCarty returned from
the Eastern Markets this morning
where he purchased the spring and
summer stock for the McCarty John
stone Company. 2
SEED CANE—Red cane, average of
three feet long. Gan be had at $25.00
per thousand. Cal\ at J. D. Thornton
207 East Pine stred, % dgp
Dr. Fred Keefer and Mr, P, L.
Keefer leave for ' their respective
homes tonight, having spent several
days here in attendance upon their
mother, who was quite ill, but is now
rap:dly recovering from her recent
illness. :
! Mr. M. Goldberg of Atlanta is in
the city, the guest of his sons Messrs.
Myer and Harry Goldberg,
Mr. S. Moore returaed from Hawk
insville, where he spent several days
on business. .
Miss Pauline Goldenburg is visiting
Miss Sarah Mirsky in Rochelle for a
few days.
Mrs. L. Everette Rhorer is enter
taining the members of thc Sigma
lota Club and o few friends this after
noon at hr pretty home on South
Main Street,
Mr. and Mrs. Ben L. Rike have re
turned to their ho.ne in Lula, Geor
gia after 1 visit to Mr, and Mrs, H.
K. Sligh on West Central Avenue.
Col. and Mrs, Jesse Grantham have
as their guests at their cozy home on
South Lee Street the latter’s mother,
Mrs. W. P. Ward and daughter Mrs.
Gordon Burns and handsome young
son Gordon Jr. and Miss Marie Ward
all of Douglas.
ESTRAYED—S\r:a/U, ‘Guinea Calf
about six month¥6ld. Phone 289 or
return to 711 W. Pine. d4p
Mr. J. Percy. Manning transacted
business in Rochelle day.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. !'ing Sr. have
as their guest at their home on South
Lee Street, the former’s brother Mr.
Lee King of Atlanta,
Fresh vegetables, dressed chickens,
country butter, eggs, fresh meats, ev
erything for an “All Georgia Sunday
dinner,” right off the wagons, Satur
day morning at nine o’clock, opposite
the postoffice.
Mrs. Beaulah Beverly and lovely
daughter Miss Corinne Beverly and
Bessie King have returned to their
homes in Hawkinsville after a pleasant
fisit to Mr. and Mrs. Bowers on South
Lee Street,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Maffett have
as their guest at their home on South
Main Street Mrs. Annie Laurie Harris
of Atlanta, Mrs. Harris will be re
membered by many friends here as
Miss Annie Laurie Hicks.
The Curb Market, the Place Wher=
A Dollar Does Its Duty.
EPISCOPAL GUILD
ENTERTAINED
Mrs. George W. Brown was the
charming hostess Tuesday afternoon
entertéin"ng'thc members of the Epis
copal Guild at her attractive home on
South Lee Street.
A pleasant time was spent sewing
for their Easter Bazaar. ;
Among those present were: Mes
dames J. T, Cass, S. W. Babbit, L. R.
Frink, J. W. Turner, D. P, Adams, Ida
Taylor and G. Wilmer Turner.
We make Old
Furniture New
'PICTURE FRAMING
OUR SPECIALTY!
Fitzgerald +urniture Co.,
Phone 49
Drs. Holtzendorf
and Turner
-~ DFNTISTS
Upstairs, next door to the
Natienal Drug Company
PHONE §7
T ST O EEE s
. H. A, Mathis
OPTOMETRIST and
- MFG. OPTICIAN
Eyes examined, Glasses furnished.
Broken Len+ Duplicated
We Grind Our Own Glasees,
Miss Pauline
Crawley
Phone 350-]
AT THE
GRAND
TODAY
“THE SOUL OF YOUTH” Feat
uring an All Star Cast. A picture that
shows you the kind of kid you once
were, and kind your grandchildren
will be. For childhood is always the
same—eager, merry, lcyal, hopeful.
Only surroundings may differ, se that
one child gets a square deal while
some other child, just as good, never
has a chance. Don’t miss the biggest
kid picture ever filmed.
“THE WHIRLWIND” Episode 10
E. & H. Comedy. 2
SATURDAY
“SWEET REVENGE” A Western
Featurette with HOOT GIBSON.
The Vanishing Dagger “WALLS
OF DOOM” Episode 14.
The Veiled Mystery “THE SINIS
TER STROKE.” Episode 13.
“HER DOG GONE WEDDING”
A Sunshine Comedy
MONDAY
CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG In
Ethel Barrymore's Great Stage Suc
cess “MID CHANNEL” A photo
drama from the pen of the great Eng
lish playwright on modern ' married
life, Sir Arthur Wing Pinero. Never
were such lavish settings and scenes,
and such gorgeous gowns and wear
ing apparel exhibited in any picture
as in this powerful play of domestic
strife.
Fox and Selznick News,
Prices 11 & 22 cents.
WOMAN'S CLUB TALKS
EDUCATIONAL MOVEMENTS
The Woman's Club enjoyed at its
regular meeting Wednesday after
noon, the largest attendance of the
year, The subject was “Educational
Movements.”
A lively business session preceded
the program for the day, a discussion
of the Curb Market being one of the
foremost topics. It was decided that
no effort would be made to check the
peddling of vegetables around town,
that it was purcly a matter of choice
with truck growers as to whether they
accepted the opportunity offered by
the opening of a curb market.
The club contribuated $l5. toward
the services of a landscape gardner
in beautifying the grounds of the
Fitzgerald High School, this move
imcnt being handled by Mrs. E. K.
‘Farmer, president of the Parent
- Teacher Association.
~ Five new members were elected,
Mesdames John Justice, Frank Justice;;
A. K. Hall, Wilmer Turner, and W.
E. Hale, This places the membership
again at an even hundred.
The need of an auditorium being
decided upon as the most important
step in educational matters, a com
mittee was appointed by the president
to go before the City Council at its
next meeting and ask that this audi
torium be built and ready for the
opening of the schools in the fall, This
committee is as follows: Mrs. R. E.
Lee, Mrs. George W, Brown, Mrs. 1.
Gelders, Mrs. Nelle Frazer Moncrief,
Mrs. C, C. Persons and Mrs. W. E.
Yeatman, Also, others signified thieir
intention of going.
Owing to the illness of Miss Al
berta McCloud the musical numbers
on the program were limited to one
number which was delightfully ren
dered by Miss Margaret Pope Thur
mond agcompanied on the piano by
Miss Dorothy Thurmond. Miss Flor
ence Willis very graciously filled in
with several readings by her pupils in
oratory, as follows: :
“In a Royal ‘Garden,” Miss Mary
Cardwell.
“In the Usual Way,” Miss Clio
Crosby.
“Courting Under Diciculties,” Miss
Gertrude Brantley.
Two interesting one-act plays werc
given under the direction of Miss
Willis, the following pupils taking
part: Misses Mary Cardwell, Kitty
Jim Wideman, Clio Crosby, Theresa
Meeks, Ruby and Gertrude Brantley,
and Messrs, Cyrus Broadhurst andi
Marvin Morris. i
The club will celebrate its Cotton‘
Anniversary on March the 16th, the
hostesses being Mrs. Frank \Nard,‘
Mrs. F. M, Powers and Mrs. Jesse
Grantham. This promises to be ons
of the most delightful events of the
club year.
The Yellow Sea.
The Yellow sen is an arm of the Pa
cific ocean, on the northeast coast of
China. Its length i about 620 miles;
fts greatest hreath about 400 miles. [t
Is very shallow and obtains its name
from the lemon-yellow color of. its
water near the land, caused by mud
suMpended In the water from the in
flow of the river Hoangho and Yang
tseklang.
i Woman’s Rights,
An Indiana court compelled a man
to give back the false teeth he had
taken away from his wife. Women's
rights still include the privilege of
biting. it Wmna.-«d!lpvo'lalu(v Plain i
Dealer.
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1921.
‘ASKED TO ACCEPT REDUCTION
'lhic:go Carpenters Urged to Accept
Wage Cut “to Keep Plants and
Factories Going.”
Chicago carpenters have been re
questg(_l by the Woodworkers’ Empioy
ers’ association to accept a reduction
of 25 cents an hour “to the end that
plants and factories may be kept going
and continued employmeut for employ
ees be assared.”
They were asked to accept the re
duction from $l.lO an-hour to 85 cents
an hour in the same spirit that the
employers granted them advances
from 60 cents an hour to $l.lO when
all previous agreements were set aside
because of labor scarcity and high liv-
Jing costs. Now the employers say
labor is more plentiful and living costs
are lower. They agree to negotiate
a new scale next May.
. OTHER LABOR NOTES
Virginia has 226,000 wage-earning
woinen,
Detroit has 31 motor-manufacturing
plants and 219 accessory factories.
Thirty-two states in the Union em
ploy convict labor on the roads.
The sewing machine industry is cen- ‘
tered largely in Indiana and Illinois. |
More than 200,000 people are em
ployed in the automobile industry in
France.
Only about 50 per cent of the lum
ber mills in British Columbia are in
operation at the present time.
Announcements weire made of the
shutting down or curtailing of large
industrial plants at Elizabeth, N. J.
More than 12,000,000 tons of bitumi
nous coal were produced in the United
States during the week of Novem
ber_ 13.
The railway men’s strike in Norway
ended in a complete capitulation of
the strikers, who won nothing of what
they demanded.
The Utah Copper company an
nounced a cut of $1 a day, effective
January 1, on miners’ wages. Lead
miners’ pay is cut 75 cents a day.
Austrian federal employees who re
cently struck for increased wages
agreed to return to work. The gov
ernment conceded all their demands.
Three hundred and thirty-one em
ployees of the Southern Pacific shops
at Tuecson, Ariz., were laid off. Eighty
eight were laid off a short time ago.
R. B. Russell, Winnipeg strike lead
~er, was releas:d on parole from Stony
Mountain pernitentlary after serving
| half hig two-y2ar sentence for seditious
conspiracy.
Reductions of wages for farm labor
of from 25 1o 50 cents a day were put
into effect by the Valley Fruit Growers'
association. a large California farmers’
| organization.
A voluntary wage reduction of 10
ner cent was voted by employees of
B. A. Corhin & Sons, shoe manufae
turers, Marlborough, Mass., to get an
army shoe contract.
A general strike of raillway teleg
ravhers and s:ation agents in ‘Mexico,
has been averted. Several demands
mzde by the men have been granted
and others submitted to arbitration.
A net decrease of 786 in the number
; of active coxe ovens in the Connells
ville (Pa)) Aistrict is reported. This
‘dm\s not include about 300 others
which have closed for an indefinite
‘ period,
At St. Jepn, N. 8., the Cornwall and
} York cotton mills announced that they
}\\'unhl stert operating on a four-day
- weel;, instead of a five and a half, be
caunse of increased demand for their
products,
The 1100 operatives of the Naum
keag Steam Cotton company, Salem,
Mass., were notified that the company
will continue operiiting the mills with
no immpdiate reduction in the rate of
wages and no curtailment of werking
hours. >
The; mines and smelter of the Cana
nea Consolidated Copper company at
Cananea, Sonora, Mexico, forty miles
south of Bisbee, Ariz., have closed
dowy. The Cananea Consolidated is
the largest American-owned copper
company operating in Sonora, and em
ploys at present approximately 1,000
men, most of them Mexicans.
At St. Louis, Federal Judge Faris
granted a permanent injunction re
straining the United Leather Workers'
inrernational union from picketing or
irterfering with the business of a lo
cal trunk manufacturer, where 1,000
employees are on strike, Simultane
onsly he, issued a temporary order
against the Amalgamated Clothing
Workers of America, prohibiting in
terlerence with the business of several
locat elothing concerns where strikes
are in effect,
Men broucht to Denver to break the
strike of Dénver tramway employees
August last wore supplied with rifles
and ammunition the property of the
state of Colorado, according to a re
port prepared be investigators in
church and social service of the Fed
eral Council of the Churches of Christ
in America; the Department of Social
Action of the National Catholic Wel
fare council, and a Denver church |
commission. The strike resulted in
seven deaths and much rioting.
Following a conference here between
Assistent General Manager Thiehoff
and superinterfdents of the Burlington
railroad west of the Missouri river, it
was announced that an order had been
issued reducing working forces from
5 to T per cent.
A strike agsainst the closed garment
plant of the Cohen, Friedlander &
Martin company, Toleds, Ohio, was
declared by the Garment Workers'
union. The plant was closed “because
of adverse business conditions,” ac
cording to an announcement which fol
towed suspension of work.
Office Phone 511 |
: Res. Phone 545
J. T. BRICE, D.C.
Chiropractor
Rooms 201-202
Farmer-Gaibutt Bldg.
Office Hours. 9:30-12-1:30-5
Other Hours By Appointment
' Fitzgerald -:. Georgia l
" Violent Thunderstorms In India, (
Indian thunderstorms are notorlous-;
ly violent, though comparatively hurm-‘
less. According to Mountstuart El-|
phinstone, the setting-in of the rion
soon in India is accompanied by such
an electric convulsion “as can scarce«
ly be imagined by those who have only
seen that phenomencn !n a temperace
climate. It generaily begins with vio
lent blasts of wind, which are suec
ceeded by floods of rain. For some
hours lightning is seen almost without |
intermission ; sometimes it only illum-}
Inates the sky and shows the clouds
near the horizon; -at others it discov
ers the distant hills, and again leaves
all in darkness, when in an instant it
reappears in vivid and successive
flashes and exhibits the nearest ob
jects in all the brightness of day. Dur
ing all this time the distant thunder
never ceases to roll and is only si
lenced by some nearer peal, which
bursts on the ear with such a sudden
and tremendous crash as can scarcely
fail to strike the most insensible heart
with awe.”—Scientific American.
Ssoe e s
The Wet Woods.
Did you ever put on a waterproof,
rubber boots, an old hat and wan
der about through the woods on a
rainy day? A foggy day wil! ao just
as well, or even a day after a rain,
if things have not had time to dry.
The moisture has brought out new
and brilliant colors. Gray, dull-colored
lichen has turned a brilliant green.
The color has become rich and varie
gated on the bark of the trees. Your
feet sink into soft moss. in which a
thousand new shades have developed ;
red, green and amber, with all its
gradations of tone. Mushrooms have
appeared everywhere of every color
in the rainbow, glistening and bril
lant. The very rocks themselves
have taken on a new hue, as all stones
do when wet. Everything is wholly
freshened up. And how the birds sing!
And how the squirrels chatter —Chris
tipn Science Monitor.
e .
. Antique Cradle.
A cradl& that rests from its lahors
wnangh it is a fine cradle still, 1s one
ot the treasures carefully guarued ip
Plymouth, Mass. This was the cradle
of Peregrine White, the first white
child horn in New England, Little
Peregrine narrowly won this honor,
for on the way over “Oceanus” Hop
kins was born on the Maytiower.
———— e
Preamble of the Constitution.
~ Here s the preamble to the Constl
tution of the United States: “We, the
people of the United States, In order
to form a more perfect union. estab
lish justice, insure domestic tranquil
lity, provide for the common defense,
promote the general welfare and se
cure the blessings of liberty to our
selves and our posterity, do ordain
and establish this Constitution for the
United States of America.”
Proper A.uition, -
It Ils very sad tor a man to make
himself servant to a thing. his man
hood all taken out of him hy the hy
tdraulie pressure of excessive husiness.
I should not like to be merely a great
doctor, a great lawyer, a great minis
ter, a great politician—l should like to
be also something of a man.—Theodore
Parker,
British Woman’s Distinction.
l The first woman to set foot on the
(top of Fuji was Lady Parkes, wife
of the first British minister to Japaa,
|Sir Harry Parkes; and she accome
‘plished the feat in 1867, when there
was oot a mile of railway in Japan.
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10c Sale
Saturday and Monday
Here’siWhat You Can Buy Satur
't day and Monday for 10¢c
© AT THE BAZAAR STORE
Saturday and Monday, let your Dimes do full duty and
In some cases double duty. Forget the high cost of
living and come to our 10c SALE
Val LACE, 5 yards
BOL loc
Fitzgerald Cotton Mill Curtgjn .
SR R f loc
Fruit of Loom Bleaching Starch- 0
1658; 1«2 Yard tor onlyr. . ... ... . l C
36 inch SEA ISLAND
TR e loc
1-4 Yard 9-4 Bleached SHEET-
T P . i s 10c
HUCK TOWELS, 18x34, Red 10
Borders, Wachk ......05 00000 c
KNIGHTS NAINSOOK Or 10
CAMBRIC, 1-2 Yard ©......... C
33 Inch INDIAN HEAD
DEZNHED KO- i Y el i 10c
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITY.
Bring Your Dimes to This Store and Go Home Smiling.,
Phone 495
107-9 E. Central
10c_10c_10c_10c 10c 10c 10c 10c10c 10c 10c 10c 10c 10¢ 10¢ 10¢10c 10 10c 10c 10¢ Toe 100 ;,;Wn, e
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yg
BEFORE SPRING
CGME% TONE UP
Your Blood Needs the Help of Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan in Springtime to Over
come Drowsy, Listless Feelings
Called “Spring Fever”
k
PALE FACES CAUSED |
BY BAD BLOOD
B |
That Tired, All-Gone Feeling a Dan
ger Signal that Your Blood Needs
This Splendid Spring Tonic |
The blood that courses thru your
body in the arteries and veins is of
the most vital importance to the
healthy life of the body. The little
red corpuscles are what carry life to
the millions of cells that make up
your body. The blood is also the
vehicle that carries away most, if not
all, of the waste products.
Springtime is the season n the
body adjusts itself from #ie rigors of
winter to the heat summer. You
notice hoy mugchs€ickness there is in
the Springf rhaps there are weeks
when you “feel drowsy and listless,
and you call it “Spring Fever.” It is
really your blood that has become
weak and thin, and it needs help,
Take that good blood tonic—Gude's
Pepto-Mangan, It will give the red
corpuscles in your blood new power
to carry fresh oxygen to the cells all
over the body. You'll notice a change
for the better in a few days. It brings
the color back to pale faces and lifts
you out of tired, all-gone feelings so
‘that you enjoy full vigor.
Spring is the time for a good blood
tonic. Take - Gude’s Pepto-Mangan
so that you can enjoy the most beauti
ful season of the year. Get it at your
druggist’s, but be sure it is the gen
uine, with “Gude’s Pepto-Mangan”
printed on the package. It is sold in
both tablet and liquid form. They
‘have exactly the same medicinal
value,
Advertisement.
Atrican’s Attitude Toward Work.
The African male hes peculiar ideas
laf his own dignity where work is con
serned. He will work for a white man
»ut he will never do anything for him
self if there are any women ahout. It
Is beneath his dignity to work. e will
fish and hunt, make nets and crude im
plerients and canoes, or pass away his
time snmoking strong tobacen and doz
‘lng. but he would not think of lending
his wife a helping hand. He compels
her to cuc down the trees for firewood
and for his dugout canoes, and when
‘t]:o_\' arrive at the spot in the forest or
Jungle where he decides to build his
lm\vn the women nust clear away the
tangled forest., Mo civilized minds tree
felling. wood ecarrving and jungle eleax
Ing are certainly laborious work for
women, but an African woman knows
nothing else, yet hers are much mors
tealthful tasks than the white wom
n's,
There Is Hope, as Munyon Said.
Bill Steedum savs that if a voung
married couple can live through Sep
tember without having a fatal quarrel
lovor whose duty is to get up and get
’thP extra cover, the chance is pretty
i fair to live until the next green to
mato ple season, anyhow.--Wilming
ton News-Journal.
Special
,27 Inch Fast Colored DRESS
GINGHAM, Yard .........:... 10(:
’27 Inch Toildunoid GINGHAM
e Yard for. ... v aO, loc
36 Inch PERCAL, 1-2
WREE HOv. loc
HICKORY STRIPES, Blue &
mrown ey Yard ;.. 0000 loc
BARBER TOWELS
o HOY 50 i loc
WASH CLOTHS,
RMRE L loc
Blue or Fancy OUTING
RN loc
Coates’ SEWING THREAD . ..
S DDODIS TG s iieiiiniis loc
The Bazaar Store
Sensible Mr. Dubwaite.
“Did you ever comain unexpectedly
and find your office boy reclining in
your easy chair, with his feet prqpped
up on your desk?” *Oh. yes.,” replied
Mr. Dubwaite. “And what did you
do?” *I registered a mental vow that
I would quit setting him a had exam
ple.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Hand Kissing Is Old Custom.
Amongst the! Romans the custom of
kissing hands was very common; peo
ple desiring a favor of anyone, even
if he was an equal, would come near,
and thus salute him before making the
request, though usually equals gave
each other their hands or embraced.
Soldiers in the army kissed the hands
of their senerals to show respect: the
same hunor was given to the consuls
and practors,
New York's Early Days.
New York's first fire chief was An
thony Lamb. s wathematical instru
ment maker who received $6O a year
for his services Pire epzines worked
by hand came o use in 1731 and
la’err kept in the ecity hall.
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dilted to Your Moo
The Victrola is always suited to your mood,
whether it be sad or gay. With a Victrola in
your home, you can, at a moément’s notice, have
the world’s greatest artists soothe you or cheer
you with music and song. Your favorite singers
and players will perform for you at your will.
Stop in and let us show you how perfectly
the Victrola and Victor records reproduce their
work, . /
1
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\\\fif VASTERS ‘q.“"
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Bradshaw Masic Company
For Rent
SYDNEY CLARE
AR AAI T IR
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Dr. G. W. McLEAN
DENTIST
Rooms 512-513 Phone 438
Garbutt-Donovan Building
’ Fifth Floor
Sunday by Appointment
10c S ale
Saturday and Monday
Star Brand CROCHET
R 106
Men’s HANDKERCHIEFS
B s 10C
Men’s Laundiied COLLARS
T B lOC
Men’s SOCKS, At
I e loc
Ladies’ HOSE, Black, At
- loc
100 Pig in a Bag Packages .
O loc
Children’s Small Size Black
PAt Palr ~ e N loc
|
PINS, 2 Papers For
Walk A Block and
Save A Dollar!
—W ' " 3 E
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