Newspaper Page Text
tHE MILLEDGEVILLE news,
SCHOOL NOTICE.
!„ order to give the best service,
1 nui-t give n,ore time to the work
in t , -" i
s necessary
iym per wee
devote five dajfc per week in
1,,-H'rvision. Until further notice, 1
v , i have only one office dny per
w , , ] ; . Those desiring to see me
,, .-;M call at my office on Satur-
hctwc-en Uie hours of ff and C.
I , lie reached by mail every day,
a; office is open to the criticism
f ,>■ public and 1 invite ally person
t0 , .il on me at any time when the
j,,|, is of the schools are concern-
f( l >u case that you have any sug-
'ins to offer, advice to give, or
.nt to make, please call on me
evorv Saturday.
P. N. BIVINS, C. 6. S.,
n ir Baldwin Co., OCorgia
No Worms in a Healthy Child t
All children troubled with Worms have on un
healthy color, which Indicates poor bloodflnd os a
roll there is more or I css stomach disturbance.
GROVE S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regu
larly for IWO or three weeks will enrich the blood,
improve the digestion, and act as ageneral Strength-
mine Tunic to the whole system.* Nature will then
rhrow off or dispel the worms, and theChild will be
in perfect health.*Pleasaat to take. 60c per bottle
PM DOWN PEOPLE
NEED RICH BLOOD
Y OU never heard a doctor say.
‘‘He is all run down, but his blood
is pure and rich."
The best thing—the biggest thing—
that Gude’s 1-V-pto-lVIangan does is to
purify and enrich your blood. Then
thuse weary, run down, dragged out
feelings will disappear, and the oldtime
vim and “pep” come back again. Get
Gude’s Pepto-Mangan today.
At your druggists—liquid or tablets,
as you prefer.
Code’s
Pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher*
kXJUJBBau
CAVE USED AS SANITARIUM
Phy.iclan at One Time Placed Suffer-
ers From Tuberculosis in. Fa
mous Underground Cavern.
The Mnmmolh cave of Kentucky Is
nri doubt oho of the most wonderful
places in the Vpited States. It has
boon known ami visited for years in a
superficial manner, luit, strange to say.
the cave lias never yet been fully ex
plored. This fact may give a little
Idea of tin* vast proportions.
M lien Danii l Webster' visited it
ho was inspired te'oratory; when Ji n
ny I.ind, the Swedish nightingale, vis
ited there, she climbed >up unto a nat
ural rostrum in a rock-walled auditor
ium and instinctively burst Into song.
Itches of the aboriginal inhabitants
are still to be seen in the caves, and
there are crudely hollowed logs siiil
lying around from the saltpeter
springs to vats, where the mineral do
posit was collected and used In the
manufacture of gunpowder required in
the war of tluit year.
Further back in the depths of the
cave are stone liuts which were In
habited for a considerable time by tu
bercular patients. These sufferers
were placed there by eminent phy
sicians who were desirous of testing
the value of the uniform temperature
of tlie rave upon the dread white
plague. Some of these patients lived
six months without seeing tile light of
day.
Those caves are a little off the heat-
SEEK IN LONDON
Mil.LEDGEVILLE, CA.
WINES ARE CHEAP IN RUSSIA
Public Storms the Government Stores
to Buy French Products
Long in Storage.
Scotland Y
tv;an of Underworld Is C,
resting Rcbbcnco..
UtLi isj
e:i INCREASE
i Moscow.—I’rewar stocks of French
j wines arc rapidly diminishing In Itus-
j Believes SUi-Cr- I pi:l - ri.e newly opened government
retail wine stores do a rushing busi
ness in Voscow and Petrograd, and
so °n, fear, only Rusaiun
wines will lie left.
. After ihe soviet government abol
ished tot a 1 prohibition amt placed the
count y n a wine ami beer basis, all
of the • irks of burgundies, bordeans
and olia .ipagnes which were sealed up
when the eznf, early in the war. de
creed picihihition, were placed in the
market. Some went to private deal
ers, hu by fai> the largest share has
been reserved for the government
shops.
Tlie principal one of these in Mos
cow is an ejahorate establishment,
with uniformed footmen nt the doors.
Before it long lines of carriages may
he seen at certain hours ot tlie day,
and , It’ generally is thronged with
buyers. . *
In these stores good'French claret
Is slill lo he had at the equivalent of
about si„Tii per bottle, while excellent x
champagnes, some of them of portion- J
Better
than Fills
Rjccr.t Dig Robberies So Well Planned
and ExecuUd That Police Can Do
Littie More Than Sucptst
Authors.
London.—Police are seeking In this
city the head of what Is said to be a
remarkable group of international
criminals./ A vei liable ‘.‘Napoleon id
crime” is believed to have established
his headquarters here. He is alleged
to command a well-organized band ot
international crooks, every one of
wliouj is a in.st master of every form
°1' nefarious crultsumnship known in
the underworld. They include men of
education, scientific attainments and
social charm. -Under leadership of
their mysterious Chief they are cred
ited with conducting burglaries, crack
ing safes and committing costly jewel
robberii .- that baffle detection. They
aie declared to work in accordance
n track of tourist travel and. white ,
are not so well I ' vitl1 l ,lllIIS of campaign prepared .by
the master mind with all tlie skill ot
exceedingly interest in
known as many inferior examples o
the stupendous handiwork of the Cre
a tor.
Colds Cause Grip and Influenza
LAXATIVE BRC1AO OWNIKETablets removerN
ogj c. There is caiy osc ‘ nremo Quinine
L \V GROVC'S slCrntare .m oex. Site.
ty Sloan’s
NOT WHAT MOTHER EXPECTED
Teacher’s Message Sent by Littlo
Clarence by No Means the
Kind She Looked For.
Clarence recently made his debut
ns a Sunday school scholar. Wlteu he
caim; hoi in; his father and mother wait
ed to hear a report of liis experiences,
luit Clarence evidently was too much
dazed by thuui to begin.
“Well, dear,” said Ids mother help
fully, “did you say the text’.'”
“yes, mother.”
“And did you remember the story j day. * They
of the lesson?" •—
“Yes, mother, I said it all off by
heart.”
“And did you put your penny in the
basket ?”
“Yes, mother.”
Clarence's mother caught him up
and hugged him ecstatically.
“Oli. you little precious!" she, ex-
claimed. “Your teacher must have
teen so proud! I know she jusi loved
you. She said something to you, didn't
she?”
“Y’es, mother."
“I knew it!" with a proud glance ot
Clarence’s father over Clarence's head.
“Come, darling, tell mother what tlie
teacher said to mother's little man.”
"She said for me to bring two cents
i next Sunday.”—Phl|ndMph(u Ledger.
¥
it scatters congestion
You get quick relief from a cold
by applying Sloan’s. By quick
ening circulation of blood the
congestion js broken up.
Millions havo also found in Sloan’s
welcome relief from rheumatism. K» • ;>
it handy for sore, bruised muscles, back
aches and neuralgia.
Sloans Liniment-kills pain!
Water Purifier.
upper sulphate for the
No Wo-033 it; C < ' , *oiiU,y Child
All children tronb.ed with worms have an un
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as i
n.l .there is rr.ire or less stomach disturlxnuv
<• >VES TASTELESS chill TONIC given regular!,
c. two or three weeks will enrich the b'ood, Im-
>iove the digestion, and o' * 23 a General Stri cgth
1 i.'.Touicto tlie whole system. Nature wil 1 .1 cl.
1 'row oh or dispe thf; worms on! the Child will he
' oerfeot health, i leavaut to lake 60c nerbott.it
Copper a
The use of ci
di sin feet ion of reservoirs and the di
st ruction of algae and noxious germs
in water has 'led to much discussion
of the old idea tluit copper i< danger
ous to health, comments the Washing
ion Still'. An, official of the Depart
meat of Agriculture maintains thus a
change has come over scientific opin- 1
ion on lids subject. Strange as It uia> |
seem, he says, Ala •re is not an uiltheii
He case of copper iiolsonllig on record, |
either in this country or abroad, and j
lie adds that toxicologists and physi
ologists who have sunicicntly studied j
the subject agree that copper, iii the
amount used for purification of water,
Is harmless. On account of the many
defects in the practical use of filtra
tion plants lie regards purification of
water supplies by copper a prefer
able method, or at least, as u safe
auxiliary. *
a great military si: ateg:at.
Gem Rebbe; its Increase. 'V
Several papers print this story with
varying degrees of sensationalism.
Of late there has been an increasing
number of jewel robberies. As a re-,
sill; mi insurance company which In
sures a good deal of valuable jouxilry
lias increased its premiums charged
on lids class of risks by 'Jo per cent.
J. W. Bell, one of London’s lending
assessors, says that many'recent Idg
robberies have been so well planned
aim executed that the police can do
little more than suspect tlie authors.
“The people who engineer these
crimes are not tlie ordinary type of
thief,“/Mr. Bell says. “There is more
i ihaiwine real Unifies hi existence to
limit >aocicty gatherings,
and in tlie hotels they are popular
guests.
"J know one man who lias a town
address, 11 country house near Bourne
mouth, and two line motors ears, who
is more than suspected of Complicity
in some of ilicse grhut robberies, blit
up to the present then; has never been
the slightest chance of,connecting him
with any of them:
Thief Worth $150,000.
“He is of good iippenruncc, alwny#
well dressed and would, in the ordi
nary wiiy, he accepted ns a guest at the
houses of wealthy people.
“I know one instance in which a
director of thieves is reputed to lie
worth $150,(RKi. Another successful
director is 11 woman who lias, n uni
versity education and a cultured and
charming personality.
"The victims, both in hotels and nt
private houses, often are watched and
shadowed for days before a suitabh
opportunity for the robbery occurs. Ii
may easily cost $1.(MHI nr $1,500 ff
meet the expenses of a successful haul
mid the big thieves require frequent
robberies to maintain themselves.
me sold at front |
Inrly good years,
to Mi n quart.
ltus an wines, produced In tlij Cau
casus and in tlie Crimea, can be laid
at from 50 cents a bottle for claret to
about “J a bottle for port and madelra
types. There are large stocks of these
on hand, and the south Jtussin vine
yards are producing more this year.
/It Is still illegal to ijell \*odkn, and
“boollegging” is prevalent In Moscow.
Occasionally a drunken man Is to
be lent in llie streets. Tlie high-
power spirits that are sold surrep
titiously are generally Impure and
have the usual disastrous effects, but ,
those In the know have jittle difficulty
In securing Food Russian cognac at ;
from $3 to f t .11 bottle. The legal ,
limit, however, is “a per cent alcohol,
lids being the Kus; inn conception of
"light wines.” \
In I’etiograd the restaurants arc
licensed to sell' wine to. patrons, luit •
in Moscow it is only openly procnr- i
( able in the shops. Restaurant diners 1
either bring their own or buy it sur-j
replPiously front waiters wt high .
prices.
The soviet government derives a
large revenue from the sab- of wines, j
BOY SPEAKS FIVE. LANGUAGES
DOESN'T HURT
IHE HEART
Collier’s Capatone Takes
Place of Dangerous Tab
lets, Stopping Headaches,
Nausea, Colds, Grippe and
Nervousness Quickly.
Collier’s Capatone is the best
aspirin, but in liquid form, with the
dangerous matter taken, out. You
van use it without fear. All drug
gists have it in ,10c and fii'c bottles,
j ach battle must curry the signature
‘‘J. Homer Collier. ” • 01
Composed for Washington.
“Hail Columbia” lias the honor of
. having been composed for President
Washington. The father of hi,s cohn-
i try wars fond of the play and some-
| times attended a little rickety theater,
one of i lie lie-a available, wlifidi laid
tlie "enormous'' enpucity of 300 persons
A piece culled “The 'president's
. March” was composed by the leader
i of tlie orchestra for 011c of those oc
casions and It was played on the en
1 trance of the President and Ids friends.
It was afterward slightly altered mid
| given tlie name of "Hail Columbia
• tin that same night there were lines
in the play that referred to America's
chief which made the subject ot them
J somewhat restless, for he-was modest
and not fond of coniDllments.
When You’re Nervous
Whatever the cause—overwork,
worry, grief, loss of sleep, ex
citement, business troubles,
stimulants, narcotics — there’s
one medicine that will help you.
Ur. Miles* 'Nervine
has relieved thousands of cases
°f headache, dizziness, irrita
bility, sleeplessness, hysteria,
epilepsy. .Buy a bottle oi your
druggist and start on the road
*o better health today
Dr. Miles’ Guaranteed Medicines.
Dr. Miles’ Nervine
Dr. Miles’ Heart Treatment
> Dr Miles’ Tonic
Dr. Miles’ Blood Purifier
Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills
Dr. Miles’ Laxative Tablets
Dr. Miles* Tonic
STRIKE COST $45 A FAMILY
Coal Tieup Meant $1,190,000,000
Loss, Says Mine Congress
Speaker.
Cleveland, 11.—The recent strike in
the coal industry caused u total loss m
$1,190,000,(1(11*, J. (i. Bradley of Dilu
tion. \V. Vn.. former, president of'll.e
National Coal Imsociutlon, declared
here in an address before the annual
convention of tin* American Mining
congress.
Resolutions condemning the pa
ternalistic altitude of the government,
deploring the entrance fff government
nto private business enterprises and
urging Industrial co-operation between
abor and capital as a means of in
creasing production, augmenting pros
perity mid lowering prices were Intro-
Jueed.
According to Mr. Bradley, the loss In
wages by the United Mine Workers of
America, as estimated by the American
Educational association, was $ I.-.ii.ihmi.
rk», the loss to railroads over $300.-
JUO.OOO. the loss to the public ill the
tnst of fuel $400,000,000 and the loss
to the mine operators $40.01)1),(KHt.
“If every family in America were to
pay $45 it would barely cover pills
** Y ,
-
LitllcJlInnlie Delisi, of New York
may lay claim to he the most accom
plished ♦ ngiiisl of Ids ago in the WOi'Ki
He speaks Russian, English, Polish
and Dalian, all w’ell and with equal
fluency.
WIFE TAMES CHIEF WITH CLUB
Little Bear Is Forced to Seek Peace
in His Tepee Through .
Divorce Court.
Chicago?—-Chief Henry ltlce Lftlle
Bear on the warpath, stropping Ids
scalping knife the while he gave the
Cherokee battle yell, was a real In
dian, but the softening influences of a
four-room fiat in tlie city have pulled
Ids teeth.
Recently he appeared in court and
asked a divorce from Maddaine, ids
J sqiianv. Ill the good old days he would
oss,' Mr. Bradley said. |„, r roundly, but the laws
...» . I of the white man frown upon these
COOLNESS SAVES MAN’S LIFE : primitive, Imt mine tin* less eflfertlve
i met hods, lit* says Mtultfaine Inis
Catches Hold of Feed Wire Carrying fallen into tie* liubit of heuthiK him
22,000 Volts, Keeps His Head with u War Hub, more him) iimre^es
• You’ll Find Dr. Miles’ Medicines at your Drug Stor*
and Breaks Circuit,
New York.—George B. Wagner, an
electrician of Dorchester, Mass., car.glit
hold of a feed wire carrying R'J.OtHl
volts while working on defective wir
ing In the power house of the New
York Central railroad at Locust are- |
line and Olio Hundred and Forty-third i
st root. v
The wire was loose and catue to |
Wagner’s cliesl, but Instead <rf trying
to pul| himself away lie dropped slowly
to his knees, pulling.the wire down
with him until lie was able to touch
tlie concrete floor with Ids elbows.
This broke the circuit and Wagner
was thrown loose from the wire.
He was sent to Lincoln hospital,
where he was treated for burns about
tlie hands, fun* and neck, lit* was
able to work aguiu u few days later.
peciall.v when lie returns to Ids tepee
filled with firewater.
Between Ids tri-weekly beatings the
chief has been posing as a bronze
Apollo for commercial artists. He ad
mits lie possesses the strength and
(-turning to handle Ids wife’, if the laws
of the white man would only permit
him to go about taming her in Ids
own way and iu the only way she cun
understand. Imt as this is not permit
ted. he seeks a divorce ar«d pence.
Chipmunk in Trout's Maw.
Woodville, Wash.- Tom Fulda, a
timber t raiser, caught a rainbow
trout in Holt t'reek which Imd just
swallowed a -mull chipmunk. The
treat was about inches long. It Is
presumed the nniuml was attempting
D swim tlie creek when lie was gob
bled up.
Y OU WILL NEVER wish to take another dose of
pills atter having once used Chamberlain’s Tab
lets. They are easier and more pleasant to take,
more gentle t^id mild in their action and more reli
able. They leave the bowels in a natural condition,
while the use of pills is often followed by severe
constipation, requiring a constant increase in the
dose. Every bottle guaranteed by your druggist!*
ChaTtiberlain^ Tablets
WINTER EXCURSION FARES
TO
FLORIDA and CUBA
VIA
-A v
Southern Railway System
Excursion Tickets now on Sale good for return passage until •
JUNE 15, 1923.
STOP-OVERS ALLOWED.
EXCELLENT TRAIN SERVICE OFFERED BY THE
Southern Railway System
Further information obtainable from any ticket agent, or the
undersigned
C. B. RHODES,
DIVISION PASSENGER AGENT
131 TERMINAL STATION,
MACON, GA.
BRICK That Clink like Steel
ARE MADE BY THE “McMILLAN” PROCESS
Burnt in Our Continuous Kilns
There is No Waste in Our Brick
We make quick shipments in any quantity to anywhere
in the South.
Milledgeville Erick Works
Company ^
J. W. McMillan, President. R. W. McMillan, Vice-Pres
Kenneth G McMillan, Supt.
Tru.-.-u <». n.acjmct
Buy the best!
€mmgmbm
m
©iy E zttsTtes
— they last huger
More Columbia Batteries are used in the
United States than all other makes com
bined, because—
Columbias have been manufactured on a large
scale considerably longer than any other dry
battery
They have over 30 years of battery manufac
turing skill and improved equipment behind
them
Every improvement of any account has been
developed in the Columbia laboratories
The Columbia “Hpt Shot” was the first suc
cessful assembly of dry cells in one package
And uguiii Columbia has demonstrated its
leadership through the development of the
new Steel Case “Hot Shot” Battery
Wherever a dry battery is needed, Columbia
will always give the best service
For sale right near you uy
4K W. BROWN HOW. CO.
< MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
Look for the name Columbia
Cblumbia
* Dry Batteries
Or — they last longer