Newspaper Page Text
whlledgeville. ga.
GERMAN FURNITURE FOR ‘FOE'
Parlors and Sitting Rooms Equipped
for Forces of Occupation in
Rhineland.
Berlin.—The German government,
although not officially In the furniture
business, fitted out 1.400 parlors, 2,(Km
silting rooms, 5,000 dining rooms, 10,-
ISOO bedrooms and 4,000 kitchens for
the forces of occupation In the Rhine
land between the full of 1021 and last
summer. .
These figures were given to the
reichstag committee of ways and
means by a soclulist deputy, who add
ed that the rooms had been furnished
with the following Items: 180 sets of
leather-covered lounge furniture, 2,900
leather-covered easy-chalrs, 1,800 sets
of wicker furniture, 0,300 wiener easy-
chairs, 2,100 setrf of upholstered furni
ture, 1,400 upholstered- easy-chalrs,
2,300 bedsteads for adults and 3,600
for children, 3,900 clothes chests, 3,400
washstands and 3,000 chaise longues. very alack this year and I am home part
The deputy, who told the committee 0 f the time. I do not like' to- take any
that a large amount of the furniture chances, so I consulted my friends,.and
was provided for occupied castles and ! one lady said, “Take Lydia Pinkham's
private dwellings, added that 207 com- medicine,’ so I did. I have felt better
tuunitles In the Ithlnelnnd had been 1 r*Khtalong anda_m in goodenoughhealth
occupied by entente troops as compared
WORKS FOR CHILD C1NIMLS HERE
MUST KEEP WELL 4,000 YEARS A80
i Thought For
The New Year
Mothers in a Like SoCmtion
Should Read This Letter
front Mrs. Enrico
Chicago, Illinois.—"I took Lydia EL j
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound foe m 1
serious trouble. I
had tried doctors and
all said the same —aia
operation. At first l
only felt the pain>qp>
my left side, bublater
1 seemed to faeKiton.
both sides. T am at
power sewing-ma
chine operator and 1
have a little' girl to'
support. I s work in *
tailor shop'and that
line of work has been'
Scientist Finds Portions of Hat-
man S’:ulb in Mounds
Bear Omaha.
By Charlott"' '■"rrkins Gilman' in? the
Nr 1 * York Run)
Two storks v-'O.lO' nesting,
lie was a young stork—and na‘*«t'w-
itided. Before lie married he had <w»-
"rtfd mainly wiUh^riplings of his own
n»d had giveip no thought to til*
t <!»<?*, either maid'iWmatron.
After he married! tii» attention wtt
wig! Yom enr.not, go!’’
She did not heed him. She spTCad
hw wings and swept and circfcd far mid
high' above—as, ia truth, she 1 hed- been
doing, for many days, though b« had not
noticed- is.
She* dropped to the ridge'pol*' beside
him when? he wns still inuttorffjf! ob
ject ions, “ Is it not glorious!” sht'CfiOd.
‘‘Como! Tliey arc nearly ready! ”
“You unnatural mother!” he tfdtst-
forth. ‘ ‘ Toil' have forgotten the tfdlbr
of nature!* Von have forgotten your
children! Your loving, precious, tort'ter,
RESEARCHES ARE DKPORTAHT
Bsclarw Psace-Lovingi Roes Inhab
ited «ha Mld-Wsat Section of
America Prior to Tim*
of Indiana.
, wmidrated upon* Hip AU-Satisfvingri And he wept—for
i VAftv; upon that TritfflmH- of Art, Labo/i “* , “K h t w, t ««•**» were shattered.
r^ntc^-their NcgtCamd upon those I B " t thp P re '^ ri ? » n0 * 8too<}
„ upon
tyfr'iivl Creations—ttktiv Children.
OY'Tily he moved the the marvelous
nsfinoto a ad jirocesseir' of motherhood.
-oW, itesurenec, inter**;. avfaiirntion,
■s«'* in 1 Mb heart for hef of the well-
■uiftblestt; her of the gleaming; treasure
f HiWMitUr agsf*; her of ’ the patient
■rooting.bmaotr the warming; w.aga, the
iuwny?wU(lt*in<Mith group of llttft? ones.
Aatsi|houa% be labored the helb' her
mild the nnsf, to help her feed the
oung. Rhtwdi of his impmnioned ac-
with 36 which were garrisoned by the
Germans before the war.
HARNESS DEER TO FLEE SNOW
Marooned Californians Escape From
Mountains by Attaching Drag to
Wild Teams.
Quincy, Cal.—Six California moun
taineers, caught In an early heavy
snowfall in the high Sierras, captured
'(2 wild deer, harnessed them together
with ropes and belts, hitched them to
an Improvised drug and broke a trull
buck to civilization. The men were
building n summer camp ul Gold lake,
far up in the mountains, when a heavy
snow storm came up unexpectedly and
they found thcuisdlves with only scanty
provisions and without snowshoes or
ski is.
On the second night of the storm a
herd of deer sought refuge In the camp
from Hip snow and Stove l’ezzola,
leader of the crew, and his compan
ions herded the animals in nil uncom
pleted room. Harnessed, the deer
were successfully guided until they
lmd broken a road through the deepest
parts of Hip snow-covered forest and
liail arrived almost at the edge of thp
tableland, where the rood starts down
out of the mountains. There the nni-
iimki wire treated to the last sugar
and were turned loose.
to go to work. I recommend your Veg.
etable Compound and Sanative WaRhto
all.”—Mrs. Mary Enrico, 459 N. Car
penter St., Chicago, Illinois.
Often the mother is obliged to support
her children and good health is neces
sary. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is just the medicine you can
depend upon. It ia a medicine for wo
men’s ailments and the relief it brought
Mrs. Enrico it may bring to you. Keep
well by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Conipgund,
ROOMS WANTED ^
Would like to secure? four nr five i
rooms suitable for housekeeping, do- i
sivably ’orated and close in to the i
city Address
V. M. BURST, Jo Baldwin .Hotel. 1
Why suffer from nerv
ousness, insomnia, hy
steria, nervous dyspep
sia, nervous prostration
or any ailment due to
a disordered condition
of the nerves?
of Giualiu. Permission. Was granted
him after m dozen years of effort to
induce owners of the land to* permit
the excavations.
The site of the excavatione- l*
marked by several eroded mounds
which the scientist believes were com
munity houses of. the Omahu or Paw
nee Indians. It is his theory that
these mounds were built- upon the
foundations of the; houses- of the ear
lier tribe, possibly ancestors- »f the
Mid-West Italians. In support of till*
belief, he bos’ discovered that the up
per structure—declared by him to
have been built with mud mil stone
sides covered with thiueh—had an
entrance on tiie south, whereas the
lower excavations clearly trtiow en
trances from the east.
Finds Bones of Men..
Using the Darwinian accumulation-
theory -one Inch of earth to each cen
tury—Doctor Gilder calculates that lie
has reached the 4.n00-years-ngo surface-
level and there he lias discovered por
tions of human skulls, arm and foot
hones.
His discoveries- include ashes, de
clared by him to' be roasted'.human
ixmes. From this he evolves the the
ory that the curly Inhabitant* were
i cannibals. Some thirty or forty im-
I plements of hone and wood' he lias
' found are almost identic with ♦crea
tions unearthed by European arehe-
I nlogists, who linye ascribed their area
| as preceding the Historic.
Peace-Loving Race, He Say?.
“We have established the fact," de
clares Hie doctor, “that tll^re lived in
this portion of Hie North American
continent a peace-loving ra
the time of the Indians, a
: ! s ! i
MILES
Omaha 1 , 3Mki.—In an efftw# to? obtain
evidence to support his belief that _ ^
Nebraska- was Inhabited 4*000 year* | i.ivity M»hor mail (their behalf, devoutly
ago by- cannibalistic cave men* Hr. | he perfcitwiotfl his skare of the-brooding
Robert F. GSHder, dector at aeieaca, | ' vhil « Hunted- in. her turn. When he
*■»« •'"»»'»,««. *«* ■«
desert landscape canvases,, has to- | When ht wws-on. the nest he tWbught alt
gun excavating a short distune* souflli • th „ m()r< her, wh» sat there solhvg
— — 1 ’ to lovinglj^.tb'snoli motile ends.
The hupfty days flew by, fear spring
—sweet siSttneu—gonttlc autumn*. TU? 1
young ones? grew larger and larger; ; t
was more main w«rk to kecp'th'ein
lengthening;, winhniitc beaks -hat fiu
•ontent mci.t. Bhdi piacpiits f r*w fkrij
afield to f TktU tHrmu.
Then tho days grew airorter, ikiip sky I
(aver, the wind collier; there nu large j
noting and' small success, in liis!
'reams he began to sae - sunshine, broad, j
timing sunshine dlry after day,.'slues
t limitless blue 1 ; thrk,. deep, y t < fiill
•f fire; and . t>rett-fics of bright vator,
allow, winm, fringed wrntti tall needs
-nvf rushes, 1 n-tning with fiat frogs. .
They were in'her ,ticuin-r r too, l '<vt lie
"id not know that.
He stretch in h'is- wlin^ and r"i.!w
irthcr every day; hut hi* wings were
ot satisfied. In his drennis cnae a
• e-asc of vast; heigfns an ,f boui rih-ss
pnecs of the earth' sncam.T.g away hc-
eaCh him; black vntttt r a inti white > i.ml,
ray water and brown land',, blue i ate?
mil grceif land, all flowing backv srd
' rnm day to dr.y, svhilctlic cold less-mod
end ihc warmth' grew.
He felt the empty spinSri'ong nights,
tines far above; quavering, bunnuig,
fur.- far below, quivmng aaorc in the
firk water ai.il felt liis gir.-nt u ges,
yid. , strong, aR’sUfficii-nf,. carrying him
n and on.
This wns in tier dnams- too, but hi?
i'ii not know that.
"ft is time to go!’ lie cried one niy;
■ They are coming! It is uponi us! ^ iis —
f must go! Gotd-by, ray wid'e! Good-by;
aiy children!” tor th*. pasnon of l\ igs
was upon him.
She was stirred H> the heart. ‘‘Fes.
it is time to go!” silo cmieut. 1 ‘1 uni
ready! Come.”
He- was shocked,' grieved, astonished.
■Why, my d«'i..v! ’ ’ he said', "‘How pre
posterous* You eanu-tt go on the great
■light! Your wings arc for brooding
coder little ones! Y«nr body is for the
winder of the glwimiiig treasure!—not
for davs and nights of re a.-el
* «
row on rhe rMge-pole and flapped
their strong ymmig wings in high ct&-
ri'siflm. They ww as big as he wa*, ;
denrfy; for as a-' matter of fact he was
Hut a young»s»«rk himself.
The* the air ivu* itieaten white with
« thoiTrtnd wings; it vrns like snow and
s tVer a>nd sen-fonmy tkere was a flash
ing; whiriwind, a- ifurrf.rane of wild joy,
amt'^tlie* the a nay ofi the sly spread
wfdt id due array,- and' streamed south
ward!.
Full of remembered joy ask! more
joyous hope, finding tliw high sunlight
better tHuw her drescas, sfte swepi away
to the far summer-land’; and her chil
dren,. mad' with the happiness of the
first flight, swept beside her.
‘ ‘lilt you are a metHerf’ he panted,
as he caught up with them.
“Yes!'”' she cried joyously, “but I
was a stork before T was a mother—
and nifhrwattl—and all’the time!”
And the storks were flysag.
mot run.
-riMiir
In the Treatment of Cold#,
Grippe and flu, Capatone
is a Scientific Preparation,
Prescribed and Recom
mended by Physicians and
Surgeons.
A quick warm up ard.' i'nstaot re-
ltfff, with no fear of affecting the
Heirt or Stomach.
Capatone ia highly recommended
for headache a, neuralgia,, rheuma
tism, nervous headachw,. nerveua-
nean, lumbago, earache, and' toatb-
athr.
Buy a bottle for 30c or dOc, take
owe dose and ask for your' money
Ubck if you are not satisfied with
results. «*
Capwtene is sold by all dorg«tore«.
Cranberries, the big Capecod ber
ry and! bwfk Cocoa in barrels at 1
12 l-2c. per pound. Just think
■5
ALL ABOARD
WINTER EXCURSION FARES ANQ
ALL YEAR TOURIST FARES
ALABAMA
ARIZONA
ARKANSAS
BRITISH COLUMBIA
CALIFORNIA
FLORIDA
GEORGIA?
HAVANA
KENTUCKY
LOUISIANA
MISSISSIPPI
NEW MEXICO
NORTH CAROLINA
OREGON
SOUTH CAROLINA
TENNESSEE
TEXAS
VIR <31NIA
WASHINGTON
WEST VIRGINIA
offi
1 rai
NOTICE.
of the .Baldwin County
m are requested to meet at
House at 3 1’. M. Saturday
r the purpose of electing
r the ensuing year and to
eh other business as may be
A M L. YOUNG. President
will give you prompt
and lasting relief.
It produces refreshing
sleep, builds up the shat
tered nerves and pro
motes a normal distri
bution of nerve force..
Your Druggist Sells It, Ask Him.
iu may think
corn flakes are alike
you taste—
4
Post Toasties
—best corn flakes
Then you’ll understand why the flavor. crUpnes*
and texture make ‘‘Poat Toastie*” the superior kind.
prior to j
. ns we com- ]
in only apply tho term. I (H'dmy this
from the fact that .the Houses were
large enough to uccontmodnle from
ten to twelve families and that the
dwellings are separated by consider
able territory. If the race had' been
warlike, the individuals would have
felt a common desire for close asso
ciation. and would have built. houses
In groups for mutual protection.”
GEORGIA RAILROAD
ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD
WESTERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA
Liberal time limit and stoo-over privileges
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO
J. P. BILLUPS. G. P. A.,
714 HEALEY BUILDING,
ATLANTA, GA.
BANDIT HERO IN CUBA
Popularity With People Makes
His Capture Difficult.
WINTER* EXCURSION FARES
TO »*fl/
FLORIDA and CUBA
VIA * W
Southern Railway System
Excursion Tickets now on Sale good for return passage untl, £
JUNE 15, 1923. ' f
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.
Escape* From Mantanzas Jail by
Blowing Hole in Wall at Middajf—
Sentences ‘Totaling 200 Year*
Hang Over Hie Head.
Havana, Cuba.--With sentence* to
taling 200 years In prison hanging
over his head and 2T>0 troops und
rural guards at his heels, Ramon Ar-
royito. Cuba’s modern Jesse James, Is
still at large. His latest feat of escap
ing from the jail at Matanzas through
a hole blown In the thick walls at
midday has again made him a popu
lar hero and added to the difficulties
of the authorities, for they claim no
body will help them follow his trail.
Arroylto took to the high road
about three years ago, and if the hold
ups, kldnaplngs and other unlawful
act* attributed to him are well found
ed, he operated In every part of the
Island before he went Into retirement
after two years of hectic endeavor,
and with a fortune variously esti
mated at from $50,000 to $200,000.
But last spring, while very prosa
ically traveling from Matanzas to a
nearby village to attend a cock fight,
he was captured by two rural guards,
acting as a train escort, wh'o held him
first for carrying arms without
license, but loaded him with chains
when they discovered h* was the no-
torlous outlaw.
Brought to Havana Arroylto w«*
greeted by thousands at the railway
station and his trip to the city Jail
resembled a triumphal procession.
While being tried nnd convicted on
numerous counts he perfected his
plans for breaking loose from Jail, and
only the accidental presence of a
mounted policeman on the harbor side
of the jail prevented a clean getaway
three months ago.
Ills escape from the Matanzas jail,
where he was lodged to await trial
for kidnaping, Is credited to n former
pal, .Tullo Ramirez, whom Arroylto
once rescued from jail at .laruco by
holding up the warden nnd turnkeys
alngle-handed In hrond daylight.
STOP PILING ON
“DIXIE GENT
COAL
Remember, Dixie Gem
is not a common coal bttt
is so higb in heat that one*
. half will give more heat
fthan the usual amount of
common Coal.
Fowler-Flemister Coal Co.
Exclusive Dealers
ByaBBffsranai ..iym