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Newsy Newslets
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: Over the counyy your fare is paid
Things that wre done, thing that-are made,
Short and snappy reading that’s true,
Places they go and things they do,
Get in on it, it’s in here for you.
,Mra. W, B Filedge returned
Wednesday from a visit of several
days to her daughter, Mre. J. O,
Davig, in Macon.
Col. R. R. Forrester made a
busine=s trip to Rome thiz week.
e -
/ Mr. smd Mis. J.P.Hornean
nounce the darrival of a bouncing
.bahy boy at their home, the young
ster arrived Thursday. lle has
been named for his father and grand
. father w!’lich is Juliug Mouroe.
e e
Miss Sara Pope left Wednesday
for an extended visit to her sister,
Mrs. I.F. MeCravey, in Midway,
Ala.
Messrs I. T. and Robt. King
madé a business trip to Mazon to-’
day. -\
AR { :
Mrs. W. H. Long, Sr., is quite
sick-at her home here. Ilet many
friends trust that she will scon he
better: '~ - |
The store formerly occupied by‘
the Muckalee Grocery Co ,is being
repainted and putin first class shape,
Tt is now eccupied by Mrs. W.H
Oliver and a nice store will also be
opened up 23 soon as the work is
completed. -
Miss Miriam Kittrell spent la-t
week end in Macon |
“ Mizs Bess Harris spedt last week
end in Albamw with friends.
Mr. Chas. Grimes, of Dawson, was
in Leesburg today on bLusiness.
Miss Bertha Cannon left this week
for Norily Georgia where she \\ili!
teach =chool” |
e o 7
NEW HOPE NEWS
Mr. G. D. Richards and Mr. Id
gar Dyes was in Americus Saturday
on business. .
il .
- Mr, Joe Uy and Wade - Cunp
have rewurned from Florida.
. —_—
Messrs W. 1B West, Hubert Varnur
and Albert Deriso made a business
.trip to Pheonix City, Ale., .'junddyl
night. e |
L Emee e 1
Mrs. Hubert Varnum spenit the}
night, the guest of Ler mother,
Mrs. S. B. Canip, Wednesday n'ght.
The many friends of Mrs. W. ‘B.
West regret to know that she is very
ill with ppeumonia.
e
s
Mr. Jim Laramore, of ¥lorida, is
visi&jn,g his brother, Mr. Towm Lara
more. :
——.—_—o_—__——
Mrs. Floyd J(m\es, of Americus, 1s
visiting her wother, Mrs. 5. M.
Jones, Sr. p -
———————o-_——
Mrs. Jim Camp, of near Leslie,
spent the mnight the guest of ber
nicce, Mrs. W. B. West Saturday
night. N A
’ ok _
Mr. Wallace Scott spent the day
very pleasantly Sunday the guest of
Cecil Richards,
'
Merchant Now Eats
- Anything on
: ijle
i “By the help of Tanlac 1 have
:0'.'3:(:0:1'.0 a case of nervous indiges
tion.l had-suffered from for ten orv
t twelve years,”” is the enfpbatic statce
‘ment of Norman V. - Brown, weil
known wall papér and paint dealer,
of 213 North Cedar St.,. Charlotte,
Na.Ge ,
“*My stomach was always out of
fix and everything disagreed with
me. .Iwge troubled with heartburn
and dizziness, and at times ther:
was o pressure of »gas around my
heart that almost cut off my breath,
“Since taking Tanlac my diges
tion is fine. My appetite is a won
der and I eat ju-t anythiny I want.
Jn faet, my stomach, acts and feels
just like a new one and 1y nerves
are as steady as “a die. To put it
all in a few words, I am just the
same 28 & new man. It’s a plea
sure fur me to tell my friends about
Tanlae.”’ - : S
Tanlac is spld by all good drug
gis's. AdVertisement. |
is a Prescription for Colds,
Fever and LaGrippe. Its
the most speedy remedy
we know, preventing Pneu
monia. s
Eagles Change Coler.
The young eagle is clothed in three
kinds of garments before it reaches
maturity. During the first year it is
black, the seecond year slate-colored,
the “third year brown and” white. It
might be said that the bal@-headed
eagle is not bald. Tt is so called from
the white ruff of feathers about its
head. The three different appearances
of the young eagle one tinve provoked
a strange misunderstanding among
bird observers. It was thought that
they were three different species—the
black, the George Waghington and the
bald. The eagle is one of the Fal
conidae, which includes hawks and all
gimilar birds of prey. ;
Great Authors Write. Badly.
All great authors write badly. That
is well known, At least the pedants
say so. Great writers are impetuous.
The vigor of their vocabulary, the in
tensity of their style, the daring of
their phrases disconcert the pedants.
To the pundits good writing apparently
means writing according to rules. But
born writers make their own rules, or
rather inake none. They change their
manier at every moment as inspirulion]
dictates; sonietimes they are harponi |
ous, soifietimes rugged, sometimes in
dolent and sometimes spirited. So,“
according to the common noticn, they
cannot write well.—Anatole France. 1
:
IMMENSE ROOKERY IN LAKE
Birds Find Sanctuary on lsiand on
Which Hunters Are Forbidden
to Set Foot.
Set in the middle of Great Salt lake
is Hat island, 12 acres in area, one of
the most- densely populated rookeries
in the world. Its ofiicial name is due
to its shape, but it is more familiarly
known to westerners as Bird island.
Seagulls and pelicans live there, The
island is literally covered with them,
and since/hunters are not permitted
to disturb the fowls, visitors experi
ence no difficulty in walking about
among them and observing their habits.
The birds have established their roosts
among the rocky formations of the is
land, which is surrounded by * salt
water more dense than that of the
ocean. The highest point is about 100
feet above the surface of the lake. :
The strangest sight on the island
is the flock of young peligans. They
walk about like a drove of sheep.
One acts as leader and the rest fol
low. Large bodied, clumsy birds they
are, scarcely able to waddle out of
the way when one approaches.
As evening approcaches one may look
out over the lake, faer to the north
east, and see a cloud of tiny specks.
It is the adult pelicans returning home
from the mouth of the Jordan river, or
from ¢he Great Bear river, 50 to 70
miles away. They are laden with fish
for their young ones. Thé pouches
under their beaks are filled with fresh
water fich- FAR N e 2
THE LEE COUNTY JOURNAL, LEESBURG, GEORG
Hard Cider Homilies,
Differdnt peoplé have different ways
of giving us pain; our friends leave
us—and our relatives fall to.
Bternity is almost beyond human
comprehension ;, Imagine, it you can,
a period so ld‘fik that 1t would allow
a man to save enough clgar coupons
‘to get a plano or a motoreyele, !
Propinquity may account for many
marringes, but it is responsiblesfor
even more divorces, -
It has taken Satan thousands of
years to reach his present technic;
yet the latest arrivals from the earth
can always show him a thing or two,
People seldom tarn maxims over and
look at them from lie back, It is easy
to believe that great oaks from little
acorns prow, but it is quite as easy
to belleve that little ncorns from great
oaks grow.—lMdwin H. Blanchard, in
the New York Sun,
e e
Mr. Jones.
Congider the case of Mr, Jones. Ile
bought a watch for 50 bones. Does
Mr, Jones rant, curse and swear,
does My, Jones his toupee tear; when
ever in the day or night he finds that
watch not running right? No, Mr,
Jones, a thoughtful man, Kknows
wateh never .will or can, so long as
heat and cold prevail, hit time ex
actly on the nail. Now this identical
Mr. Jones will buy—well, not for 50
bones, but for the price of a cheap
cigar—the right to ride on a trolley
car, a car that has to run its race
within no sealed and dustproof case,
but on a crowded city street where
all the tides of traffic meet, and yet
Mr. Jones starts a hot debate when
e’er that car's a minute late.~From
Electric Traction.
Length of Birds' Life.
The chief of the biological bureau in
the United States is able to give the
ages to which seme birds have lived.
The following are his figures: Thrush,
15 to 25 years; swallow, 9; canary, 20;
cardinal, 21; raven, 69; magpie, 21;
large owls, 68; golden eagle, 46; white
pelican, 41; cormorant, 23; large blue
heron, 60; swan, 102; mallard, 29;
other ducks, 11°to 23; vyster-catcher,
30; herring gull, 44, and wandering
albatrog, 46 =years.
Never Saw Their Faces.
The young woman was looking at
a child’s book, “The SunboOnnet
Babies.” “Those Sunbonnet - babies
were my-delight and my despair when
I was littl,” she said, “because I never
could see their faces. If you'll leok
carefully at every pi.re you'll no
tice the faces of those “babies are
never tréevealed. Other characters in
the illustration show their faces, but
never the sunbonnet babies, :
“The only idea you can get of what
sort of little gitis they were is by their
posture. ‘And I uged to peer and peer
at those sunbonnets. I used to turn
over the pages and look through from
the back side; I used even to tear the
pages a bit to see if I could not get
inside of those sunbonnets. But 1
never could.
“Some day I'm going to write to that
sunbonnet artist and ask if he won’t
send me, in confidence, one picture of
those habies with their bonnets off."—
Springfield Ution.
CURED MONARCH GF AVARICE
Power of Turning Everything He
Touched Into CGold Quickly Palled
- on King Midas.
_ It was because King Midas helped
a 4 drunken companion of Bacchus to
sober up that he received the power
of turning everything ‘into gold at his
touczl. Bacchus had offered to graiit
Midhs aenything he asked, and the
king wished this unpleasant power
upon himself, according to. Ovid. .
Midas enjoyéd himself iminensely
at first, turning twigs, upph:;, stones
and clods of earth into gold. But the
trouble began as soon as he sat down
to eat. 'The bread he touched turned
to gold afid defied his teeth. The wine
flowed down his throat as liguid
pold,i- ; .
According to an embellished ver
slon of the myth, the crowning mis
fortune wrought by Midas’ curse in
biessing's guise was when, in the act
of caressing his litile daughter, he
turned the child into a golden
statue. ;
Bacchus had been aware that the
gift was anything but desirable
So, believing Midas cured of avarice,
he sént the king to wash away the
power in the fonntainhead'of the
River Pactolus. As a result of his
bath, .the sands of that river remain
golden to this day.
i Peculiar Deep-Sea Fish.
The Aristens, a deep-sea prawn, has
a method of lighting that gives the ap
pearance of a multitude of smoke rings,
When excited by the nearness of &n
enemy, the prawn ejects respiratory wa
terin tiny squirts and into this stream
the luciferin is forced from countless
glands cpeniug into the stream by fine
duets. As the chemicals combine, puffy
clouds of luminescent particles float
in the sea. This is the “smoke screen”
provided by nature, 7 5
The species of luminous fish, called
“Photoblephron,” has a dimmer Sys
tem in an inside chamber and burns
continuously. When the fish wishes to
shut off the light, he causcs a black
pigmented curtain to slide down over
the‘light cell’s opening like an eyelid,
The light organ preserves its lumines
cense even when removed and is used
by fishermen of the islands of Banda,
about 800 miles southeast of the Philip
pines, /as, bait for night fishing.
-PRIZED AMBER AS CRNAMENT
1 Romans Secured It From “Barbarous”
~ Qerans, Who Had Small, Idea
| * of fta Real Value,
~Amber, which:is fosstized resin, was
in great demand ameng the Romans
for vrnaments, Toacltus, In his
“Germuuin,” tells that It was_ gathered
by the barbarian Germans, “They ex
plore’ the sea for amber, in thelr
language called ‘gleese, and ard the
only people who gather that curlous
substance,” he says., “It is generally
found among the shallows; sometimes
on the shore, Concerning the nature
6t the cause of this concretion the
barbariang, with their usual want of
cdriosity, make no inquiry. Amonrgst
othér superfluities discharged by the
goa this substance lay long neglected,
till Roman luxury gave it a name and
brought it into request. To the Sav
ages it 18 of no use. They gather
it into rude heaps and offer it for sale
wWithout any form or polish,, wondering
at the price they receive for it,”
Tacitus guessed correctly the origin
of amber, saying: “There is reason
to think that amber is asdistillation
from certain trees, since in the trans
parent metium we see a variety of
insects and even animals of the wing,
which, being. caught in the . viscous
fluid, are afterwa=ds, when it grows
havd/ncorporated with it.”
Poem Had Origin in Actual Life.
The famous poem about the.boypwho
stood on the burning deck had its
origin in an actual happening which
congtitutes a page in history. :
It was during Napoleon’s expedition
to Igypt that England sent erd Nel- ‘
son to capture him and annihilate his
fleet, At the battle of Abukir the
Freneh navy was crushed and Na
poleon was forced to flee, all but four
of his ships being sunk, burned or cap
tured.
The I'rench admiral had been killed.
And on the deck of the flagship stood
her captain, Louis Casabianca, who
then had command of the fleet. He
was wounded and the ship was burn
ing, but he refused to leave his post.
And in spite of commpands and en
treaties, his son, a boy of ten, stayed
with him and died with him when the
ship went down, s@pplying the tl(;?me
for that famous epic of "ehild heroism,
“The boy stood on the burning deck.”
Compass Plant Western Product.
On the prairies and plains of Utah,
exas and southern Minnesota there
grows a wonderful plant which has
proved useful to travelers wandering
over these vast tracts of country. It
is called the compass plant, or pilot
plant, because of a peculiarity in the
growth of the leaves, which grow al
ternately along the stalk, and point
precisely nerth and south.
The Indians foliowed the direction
given thiem by these pointing leaves,
and told the white men about it
This plant belongs to the . family of
the Compositae, and looks very much
like the sunflower. It has a strong,
resinous odor, somewhat like turpen
tine, and sometimes goes by the name
of “turpentine plant.”
\
One of Noah's Pets. |
It was swampy around Denver 2,
000,000 years ago, according to Prof.
J. D. Figging, director of the Colo
rado Museum of Natural History. The
traveler who wants to hobnob with
the monsters of long ago can do so in
the city park collection, in Denver,
where the skelgton of an animal close
1y related to the present-day rhinoce
rous. is on exhibition, one-half of it
covered with “an imitation hide. }
S el g 1
.: : |
In Doubt. }
* One of our good housekeepers knows |
she has no ear for music, but when
she is hustling around her pots and
pans and scrubbing and washing out
ton towels she cannot restrain hum
ming a bit just out of her cleaning-up
joy. Now theré is also a little neigh
bor boy who plays under her window.
Once while the procegs of scrubbing
was coing on above the little fellow
looked up at the window with a face
all” puckered and serious, as’lf some
auestiqp had been troubling him for
quite a while. s >
“well, Tommy, what's the matter?”
{nquired tbe housekeeper.
A long pause—then, “Please, ma'am
is you singing?’—Excbange.
-
The Singer and the Song.
A sogg is a great’ adventure. Thou
.sands write it, / tens. succeed; and
when they have succeeded, its fate
still lies entirely with. the singer, No
one eyer had it so much in his power
to make the worse appear the better
cause, or to refrain from 80 doing.
The ancients placed Thamyris and
Naraca among the gods; the moderns
pay their counterparts 'royalties, . But
the singer’s personality is still incal
culable in terms of canonization or of
cash, That personality means all that
he has been able to crowd into his life;
%nd he may stiil enlarge it. A good
way to do that is to read all the poetry
that he does not sing, and to listen to
all the mugic written for some other
instrument than the voice—A. H. Fox
Strangvwavs. : :
o
It Was Hard to Bear.
Mr.—Have you heard that Sjoberg’s
wi{e had run away?
frs.—No, indeed? Poor fellow!
How did he take it?
Mr—Wel, he has now calmed dewn
a little, but for the first few days he
was delirious with joy.—Stoeckholm
- Kasper, 2
" )
A , Lo
. .
I-have recently returned from thé Lastern Mark
ets where I purchased a complete linc of Dry
(toods, Shoes and Notions which has arrived and
[ can notv supply the demand of the People of
Leesburg and Lee County,
THIS 1S THE NEW STORE--
Which has recently opened up here and located
on the West side of the Dopot. Come to see me
for your Dry GGoods and save money. 1 welcome
you to my store any time whether you buy or not.
: g : o
H NANKIN, .
' '
. . "
vy ‘- Georgia.
- A Complete Line - - .
Steak 20¢ 1b; Pork 20¢; Pork Sausage 30c¢; Stew’
Beef 124 c; Ham 40 and 50¢ Ih; Meal 25¢ peck, _
Best IFlour $1.25 Sack; Sugar 3 pounds 25¢; Rice
3 pounds 25¢. Everything else in Proportion. =
; : '
- Leesbutg, : Georgia
% TR R A
- W 5% '?”‘, N ) "‘_p‘":: . . ®
EAGLE“MiKADO”FencxI N 0.174
For Sale at your Dealer Made in five grades
ASK FOR THE YELLOW PENCIL WITH THE RED BAND y
L : EAGLE MIKADO s
v EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK
Greatest Mother Summons Her Children
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An allegorical concept of the Red Cross as a peace-time ideal is em
ployed by the’ American Red Cross in 8 new and striking poster for its
‘Annual Red Crogg Roll Call. Spread out before the heroic size figure is the
outline of the United States with a Red Cross superimposed upon -it while
around its borders are sketched scenes depicting the chief activities. of the
Red Cross today—service to disabled veterans of the World War, disaster
relief and promotion of the public health. The poster is-the work. of
Lawrence Wilbur, a New York artist and will be displaved throughout the
‘country during the enrollment of the Red Cross membership for 1928, =
: Uncle Eben, ‘
* apar’s mighty few “people,” said
Uncle Eben, “dat don't believe dey’s
fntitled to sympathy; an mighty few
l dat won't resent it, if you offers it too
liberal.” . i
A Beats Stove for Heat. ;
Of European invention is a sheet
‘metal stove . pipe drum which {8
‘@ained to radinte more heat In
‘room than the stove with which it s
used. B
T 8 "