Newspaper Page Text
the package— no tugging it out with the
fingers. Keeps tho tobacco in even
better condition than tin. Now, d*
9 don’t y ou ov/e it to yourself to
buy a package and give Tuxedo
a trial?—Not quite as much ifF
_ tobacco as in the tin,
■mu*.-
finest, stro
nil the WO)
rette with
1
Finest Skirtey Tobacco
MsfcT-ajed till perfect
-J- "• of Chocolate
""C-- •‘'■oseKuows
Tiie New c ‘TEA-FOiL” Package
ft’s soft and pliable—decreases in size as
the tobacco is used—tobacco does not cake in
lightcnt, thinnest,
ngcat cigarette papers in
■Id. Roll n Tuxedo ciga-
RIZ LA CROIX.
1C our Institutions are to avoid the
risk of a trial at the bar of public
discontent. Rules of thumb are liable
to prove Inadequate In this period of
readjustment. Nothing short of alert
opcn-tnlndedness, reinforced by pos
session of the fullest available Infor
mation, will serve. In view of these
fuel* the business world Is entitled
to the fullest measure of assistance
that governmental agencies are pre
pared to render it. It Is in the spirit
of (hat principle that the flies of the
council's reconstruction research divi
sion are now thrown open to tho busi
ness public.”
Inquiries may be made by written
communication, by telephone, or by
personal representative. Requests
should be addressed to the Reconstruc
tion Research Division, Council of Na
tional Defense, 18th and D streets,
N. W., Washington, D. 0.
$10,000 Judgment Against Bibb County
. Macon. — Judgment against Bibb
*county in the sum of ten thousand
dollars was rendered by a jury In the
city court of Maoon In the case of Mrs.
lliram L. Williams, of Monttcello, who
brought suit alleging responsibility of
the county for the death of her hus
band, J. Walker Williams, who was kill
ed in an accident on the Clinton road
In February, 1918, when his automo
bile was forced off a bridge after the
hub mil of the banister on the oppo-
site side of the bridge had fallen on
>the bridge and was struck by the car.
't
Big Wage Advances To Express Men
1 Washington.—Wage increases aver
aging about $15 a month for approx
imately 69,000 employees of the Amer
ican Railway Express company were
{announced by Director General Hines,
ffhe increase represents an advance of
{$25 a month aboye the wage Beale in
Effect January 1, 1918. The increases
inean an addition of about thirteen
million dollars a year to the express
pay roll. The director general alse
jraised the wages of 12,000 sleeping
and parlor car employees $25 a month.
Fitzgerald To Have Hospital
FItsgerald.—Fitzgerald will will
soon have one of the largest hospitals
in. south Georgia, a company being
organized by the local physicians and
business men for that purpose.
n Guaranteed by
iNOOnvOPATIO l,B *
heavily upon the shoulders of busi
ness and relatively less upon govern
mental machinery. Of the two grand
divisions of reconstruction, demobiliza
tion and reorganization, the former be
longs chiefly to the government and
. the latter devolves raaluly . upon pri
vate enterprise. The former tends
Steadily toward Its conclusion; the
latter broadens Into the foundation
of ari Indefinitely expanding future.
And though the government has, and
will continue to have Important re
sponsibilities In connection with the
economic reorganization of the nation,
It must be acknowledged that those
who are to deal with these problems
hand-to-hand are the directors of busi
ness undertakings.
“It must be recognized, also, that
we have come out upon a new world,
in a sense, in emerging from the
world war. Our Industrial and com
mercial reorganization must be effect
ed under conditions that have under
gone considerable alteration during
the struggle. Not only price levels,
but price ratios also, have been
changed, and In many cases perma
nently so. New Industries have arisen;
markets have been altered; Interna
tional economic relations are modified;
means of transportation and communi
cation have been partially revolution
ized ; but nothing has undergone great
er change than our social viewpoint
and especially the viewpoint of labor,
There are new opportunities and new
and promising outlooks, but they are
not quite like those of pre-war times
Tlie chessboard has been shaken; some
of the chessmen have disappeared,
while several others have been moved
forward or backward a little.
“Not only have purely business fac
tors altered, but new duties • have
arisen—the social responsibility of the
business enterprise has become a much
more serious matter than It used to
be. In the light of world develop
ments It Is obvious that our business
system must prove its resourceful
ness; It must demonstrate hitherto
unrevealed capacity for readjustment;
It must show n disposition to meet and
satisfy certain species of expectation
which have gained recognition during
the war and can no longer be uncere
moniously Ignored or suppressed. As
Secretary Redfleld says: We cannot
be a law unto ourselves any more.’
General and continuous prosperity
must he underwritten arvd guaranteed.
Doctor Thinks He
Has Diabetes Cure.
New York.—Dr. Thomas Web
ster Edgar, 766 West End ave
nue, asserted that he had dis
covered a cure for diabetes.
“First,” he said, “I convinced
myself that diabetes is caused
by functional defects In the
pancreas—by the failure of es
sential parts of the pancreas to
do their work.
“I tried the blood of rabbits
and found what I wanted. In
obtaining the blood I first put
the rabbit upon a treadmill and
beep It there until It reaches a
stage of fatigue. Then I draw’
the blood, and after heating It
to 60 degrees centigrade sepa
rate the corpuscles from the
sernm. When the serum has
been treated after the method
I have discovered, I Inject It
immediately subcutaneously.
“I have attained success In 65
■ t per cent of my cases and I have
;{ had 100 cases. I do not say
that the cure Is infallible, but
I am now certain that It will
work In most cases, particularly
when the patient observes the
rules laid down and undergoes
faithful treatment.”
COFFEE PRICE NOT DECLINING
Will Go to 50 Cents or Higher,
. Roasters' Head Says at Cleve
land Convention.
Cleveland, O.—The f>rlce of coffee
Is not going to be cheaper for a while
according to a statement by Carl W.
Brand of Cleveland, president of the
National Coffee Roasters' association,
who presided at a sectional meeting
here of 75 coffee roasters from Ohio,
western Pennsylvania, Indiana and
southern Michigan. Coffee has ad
vanced In price on account of a severe
frost In Brazil, Mr. Brand said, and
he would not he surprised to see good
coffee retail at 50 cents a pound and
perhaps higher In the near future.
Serif, Fountains Were Poisoning Fish
Cordole.—At the request of the state
game warden the local bottling plants
liavo made such Improvements as will
not allow the soda drainage from their
cleaning tanks to go into Gum creek
In such a way as to destroy the fish.
4 representative cf the game ward
en’s office who was In Cordele recent
ly In the Interest of this change, ex
pressed delight at tho ease and wil
lingness with which the request had
been met. It Is believed that the im
provement will mean the" saving of
many fresh water fish ,
240 jfojND PIGS.
Willi corn above 50c, hogs oat
their heads off very quickly. The
hjog that takes two or three months
to get on full feed never brings
you a profit. When you are ready
co pul, your shoals on feed, begin
with the B. A. Thomas Hog Medi
cine Uso regularly and watch
yourshoats round out into fat
hogs in nine months—hogs going
well over 200 pounds and as high
as 240 pounds. Figure the overage
feeding and yougwM'see why the
B. A Thomas medicine is a good
n vestment. 'Try feeding out
your hogs on this plan and if yon
are not more than pleased, we will
refund the cost of the medicine.
R. L. March man, and
Perry, Warehouse Co. Agents.
NOTICE TO HEIRS AT LAW.
Georgia, Houston County.
Will Jones having applied to the
Ordinary of Houston County by pe
tition asking that R. M. Nicholson,
as Administrator of the estate of
Charlotte Marshall, deceased, late of
said County, be required to make
him a deed to a certain tract or par
cel of land, being one-fourth of the
lot originally owned by Charlotte
Marshall in Foi’t Valley, Georgia, on
which the said Charlotte Marshall re
sided, said one-fourth being cut off
of said lot as follows: The north-west
corner of my said lot is also the
north-west corner of the lob covered
by this aggreement; beginning at this
north-west corner run south along
First Street one half the width of
my said lot; then run east at right
angles one-half the distance to Sec
ond Street; then north to the north
line of my said lot, then west tc
starting point,” in pursuance of the
terms of a bond for title executed- by
thethe said Charlotte Marshall to
the said Will Jones in her lifetime,
the said Will Jones alleging that he
has fully met his obligation in said
bond for title,-
This is to notify Mary Fuller, heir-
at-law of the said Charlotte Marshall,
deceased, to be and appear at the
May Term, 1919, of the Court of Or
dinary of Houston County, and show
cause if any they have or can, why
the said administrator should not be
repuired to make said deed as prayed
for by the said Will Jones, in his pe
tition aforesaid.
April 7th., 1919.
I. T. WOODARD, Ordinary;
o
$100 REWARD, $100
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure in all its stages and
that is catarrh. Catarrh being great
ly influenced by constitutional con
ditions requires constitutional treat
ment. Hall’s Catarrh aMedicine is ta
ken internally ..and ..acts thru ..the
blood on the mucu3 surfaces of the
System thereby destroying the foun
dation of the disease, giving the pa.
tient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature in do
ing its work. The proprietors have so
much faith in the curative powers of
Hall's Catarrh Medicine that they of
fer One Hundred Dollars for any case
that it fails to cure. Send for list of
testimonials.
...Address F. J. CHANEY & CO.,To
ledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggist, 75c.
Clear Your
Complexion
with This
Old Reliable
Remedy—
Hancock*
SUIPHDSCOMPODHD
For pimples, black-heads, freckles, blotches
and tan, as well as for more serious face, scalp
and body eruptions, hives, eczema, etc., use
this scientific compound of sulphur. Asa lo
tion, It soothes and heals; taken Internally—
a few drops in a glass of water—It gets at the
root of the trouble and purifies the blood.
Physicians agree that sulphur is one of the
most effsetive blood purifiers known. Re
member, a good complexion isn't skin deep
—it s health deep.
Be sure to ask for HANCOCK SULPHUR
COMPOUND. It has been used with satis
factory results for over 25 years.
50c and $1 the bottle
at your druggist’s. If Ihe can’t supply you,
send his name and thj price in stamps and
we will send you a bottle direct.
HANCOCK. LIQUID SULPHUR j
COMPANY — —'
Baltimore. Md.
fhnutel Sulphur Ctmfund Olnt-
mmt—ZS and SOc—firuu Udth tht
Liquid Ctmptund.
n>
Mweira
NEDI6II
Is
GIVES
RELIEF
Give Orders
Don’t hitch up and drive to town
with a load or grain or stock be-
fore you know the latest market
quotations. The price may have
gone way down since the news
paper got their report. Why not
telephone? Then you’ll get uf>-to-
the-minute reports and you can
hold your produce till the last
moment for highest prices.
You nerd—and can easily secure an
Independent
Telephone
Code No. 896
Ask us about It to
day. We will ex
plain how you can
get an independent
line to your house
and have the con
veniences of a city
home right where
vm D ° “
HOUSTON’
Telephone Co.
CARDU
Officers Find Swamp Full Of Liquor
Macon.—A swamp stocked with
“moonshine” was discovered by reve
nue officers working out of Macon. The
liquor was poured into the creek which
flows through Putnam county near Eat-
onton. A man, giving his name as
“Fate” Morgan, was arrested as the
Jwner of the whiskey and bound over
under bond of $1,000. The officers
found more than two hundred gallons
in cans, kegs, and barrels buried at
different points in the swamp and hid*
den in the bushes. f-
Keeps your stomach well, your bowels regular,
... your liver active anc blood pure
At Drug and ©
i-o General Storea
Cash Bros. Drug Company, Inc. Manufacturers
Jacksonville, Fla., who mnke the genuine. 1
Pardon Of Spence Favored S
Thomasville.—The state prison com
mission lias recommended a full par
don for O. C. Spence, sentenced Sep
tember 9, 1915, from Grady county, to
serve seven years in the penitentiary.
Spence was tried and convicted in con
nection with the failure of the Bank
of Whigham of which he was cashier.
The case attracted much attention and
there was considerable feeling in re
gard to those who were connected withj
ihe bank.
GUARANTEE—If. after using entire contents
•f the can according to directions, you are
not satisfied in every respect, your grocer
will refund the money you paid for it*
Such
Luzianne is such a cof
fee as vop. long have
wished for-oFHistine
tive Quality and of fla
vor unsurpassed. It is
literally true thatyou
will never know now
od coffee can be nn~
u you try Luzianne.
UIZEANNE
coffee
New Orleans