The Fort Valley leader. (Fort Valley, Houston County, Ga.) 1???-19??, August 14, 1908, Image 8

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Writy, QUALITY, CLEANLINESS. above is what _ Our goods stand f ’ : or, We start¬ ed the bottling - business in Fort Valley some 4 years ago. We have never used anything but the very ngredi- best and highest grade oi of price, price t^the^manufacture m tnt manuiaciu e of our goods, and we are putting out goods which now, comply as heretofore, jgti iccly with the Pure Food L&ws. Our plant is kept in a perfuifciy sanitary con¬ dition, and is open to the all inspection of the public at times. PURITY BOTTLIN J CO, Mr W J Anderson is at home for a while to spend a part of his 3 months’ vacation. Recently he reenlisted in tire Army, his time having expired. Mr Anderson has seen much service in the Philippines, He thinks the islands have great advantages, itnd. that when the onward march of civilizatiotf teaches them un¬ told w<#alth Will be found. He enjoys the roi*?% army life. Re wilt Bpend som^thboe with his mother and other relatives here jggid then, goto Governors Island* Jlj£*to assume his duties as a jvfiy soljer boy. The Leader Wants N*WS TherFuat Valley Leader is am¬ bitious for to fill it s;eoluirins with all tic Lacal au#'Society news of the " When visit, wn.„ you re co ^Company, entertain, etc., ' us an account of it and we • vi-n publish it with pleasure. Mrs HM Branham and daugh¬ ter and Mrs Fannie Stapler left Wednesday morning for a week’s stay at Indian Spring. I a T JL 1 irsk m r MacHysiti and parts for alikinds of Machines : 5 ' ’J* RMl ’Ulv’lNi J ■A SCiit’L I, E. EUBANKS, ^ « ImW©wStone of Mr. Ar.dr ta*r, (os® Maatoon Street* Ctei! IWteirt.E Bmoiwn has been sjpip^initlrf ssstofliiciittvo’-sr <o>lf the city ©.mirlwff Hico^isttiam (CwwnmtLyT by Gov Smiittlfe.. "Dhitt" has Ms aUtailliiitjy iirni aj,v pdHintliisBjg tUiwe rifigttutt, mroum four ttlhue* neM nQfuuev CM Buu»wim iis (omae* <otfl tftr fie®(fiiiini£r M'wytwrst, rf iPlomtt, V;»!h fe*y anmi ttfiioxni.'sttraiffli cwHEnatty,, maoi il* to ctH^ginBfluiMtod.. Hiue 01 x 1111 ®% CHWmrtt litns tosnu DbioL^htedi ;»mxdl fibe otiy emsBard cirv'tttodl. Oofi C C Dianaisaua ibas ibam ’JippeamtttM P&ge- 1 Kan**- Escape- 4TnisKi% pay itifetot Mi pora mvm TUne* lifeutfletr tor •md jjt>lh\wo«ik. W<e aoiBffifl ttlbe tmoun : ®GEf a exist <otf assort! stoiai waiter- , fetep eefld m ir»inin^% %mi tdbese Img Biny £ o®s toff aeitafi Miss Nettie Ray left Saturday for Macon and a trip to Tybee. * Rev TG Lang returned home Friday night for a few days. Miss Vera Watkins after a pleasant visit to Mrs R A Hiley left Saturday for her home at Garden Valley. Mrs Baisley and children of of Atlanta are visiting Mias Nettie i Marshft11 and Miss Nora Roun ' ^ ree Quite a nice jolly crowd went to Norwoods Springs Friday j afternoon and spent a delightful: 'evening, returning in the ful Moonlight. i for Miss trip Nell to Carter several 3e ft places Saturday in; j a ''Florida and then to Jacksonville j to visit her sister, Mrs Will 1 Houser. Thrice armed is he who hath j his adverting displayed just right. Misses Willie Hue Carter, Lizzie and Allie Houser ting Miss Ethel Henderson near Americus. Maj. McDonald and daughter’s I have returned home from hheir | visit. Mr C E Hay of Atlanta visited Misses'Walking and Herrington Sunday A large crowd of young and married people went to Taylors Mills last Friday aftenoon for a 'damp time. Some of them fell in a hole and had to have help. For particulars ask Charlie Rountree. To sit down and wait for busi¬ ness to come to you without ad¬ vertising is as silly as to expect your garden to grow vegetables without planting any seed. Mr B T Marshall and Ben roe left Saturday morning for Clay¬ ton, Ga., where they M will A '• spend shah | j [' ive Fiu weeks-, rs -ITS id PWl Vi •V ; r&rrta whj'k V J i sc v-c rii] diV, mW win. .+■ Jill jVrt ? Idiom's heyerFriday a?i» ro.oir. ! ? It y&u are in the r.afifc puff-ga-.the' wing’s o- • '- /<. publicity .and ..got fftrs*. • - Mb' C-.tow^art ' Ak r - -5i ;Jam i.If,Popci - ,T is oni ; Sfrc* i n j v v k *'Qv! af*y.)'0k'' iB’ , , - ■ :<%dea vi'^ x ■G ! ret'W’nt'd A u*' S Mis -. LfitA I? ;> y. witNher 1 week bt -Ul 1.1.01 i 1 > ’ K Hiley. \ Mr andMrSu H.^inswtn nnd f latktle son of Popes Ferf^ spent week with relatives?!. Il'uikmd* here. v mg is the best N ■** <• 1 dinae tfioer at sick business, wffiirfe* wihiOle poxn sleep. t' Mr Wailltor IDlarxii# to' Camden S C iis wikiitthm^ nmar here. j Mr iffiiwi Mira? Finaiffik Withoft sBnai lame HqpemSiimsg,- 8B©wral dtiijs tot- Stt Siimxflsn Mims lEttfieffinae IfeMvcnm ltenvie* I i Firiiiafsr «t>«a lla&ir WatsiliiaE^toiiu tktiip | wBnikfln *H»e mm iim ILaater not Fteittiillikt? jmw ikMainoest* vwiittihi kkfl\uarttii«mng aonti mtotdb it £ww.. W. H. WHITE PHOTOGRAPHER UbeDtoktsSt sBttyUfiHB totoHtMocf&to* TOKr VAUUE12 &JL. Don’t wait until your business gone to the dogs and then you wish you had advertised. it now. Investment in advertising space The Leader pays higher divi than a bonanza gold mine. Mrs Geo T Harris and Mrs II went down to Marshall Tuesday to attend Mrs MS reception to Miss Barks of Milledgeville. Mrs E P Chambers and Miss Williams of Gainesville jgft Monday for a visit of 10days Mrs*! D Wade of Marshall* ville. Many functions will be give i in theh^ honor while there. MrWW Roberts and family lcjf^<fUursday for their northern hoi , their many friends regret to see them leave, but hope to see them again next season. Quite a large crowd left Friday for a few days camp tish at the Factory, hope they will catch lots of fish and no snake bites. The members were Mr and Mrs Fred Shepard, George Fincher, Tom Flournoy, Wajton, Scroggs, Misses Hyatt, Mamie Miller, the outing was given in honor of the Misses Scott. There was quite a crowd from the Valley spent Sunday at Miona Springs Mr Arthur Glass visited At¬ lanta this week. While there he purchased an up-to-date soda fount, which will be one of the < t swellest” ever seen here. Bryan will get a tremendous vote in November. Georgia is as sure to give him her 13 votes as Tom Watson is to get the .. suffin’ ” beat out of him. NOTICE If you want any Ping Pong Photo's 20 for 25c. You had burry up as I am uu* only two more weeks, > * » C . F. Capien. ,d hi rs Jr 6 V I David soi i i iii i PUlfc i m in Horn; t()% V! ■ J Toronto ar-d 1 i : ■ - :a u anatta i U'S ? \ A .. d# r /> / rCAj. it: \ *X.ates J: H rif: . return ... f Ml- hJXf account j M ■ « be held ! return all •(_„,- .count Supreme of Pythias, to be Aug. 4-15,-1908. Li* Methodist Church T$j6 : wTisSlGn Study Class will the congregation next evening. There will be collation. The program of j | service and music will exceptional. Mr J M Jones j by,Mrs W LHonser will I charge of the exercisi^s. pastor will occupy the put morning hour. T. G. Lang. Churcli Notice SnransSaiy School 9:45 a. . m. , ««siviiees on Sunday. Regular, Ist’Sundav morn-! a*. m , Sunday o , night. ...... 4th morning, oth Sunday ;G® to Miona Springs weekly rates till Oc-s per week. Remember my Photo tent back of Pattons store will close after 2 more weeks. B. F. Capien. •That settles It!” replied the Tieigh bor. 1 always said her mother wa« a cat.”—Detroit Free Press, HU Minaiou. Old Mortality was freshening tap the iMegible Inscriptions on the ancient tombstones. *. I merely wish to show,” he explain cd to the curious bystandei "that 111 ere is nothing essentially new i modern fiction.'’—Chicago Tribune His Wife’s W r lH. “What makes Peck look so worried V' “He’s been contesting his wife’s will.” “Why, I didn’t know his wife was dead.” “That’s just it; she isn’t.*'—Cleveland Leader. He who speaks for any length pf time in the presence of others without flattering his hearers awakens their displeasure.—Goethe. Go to Miona Springs special weekly rates J ill Oc¬ tober $7.00 per week. A Valuable Possum. When he was asked about the I rice of a big, fat possum he wag awking around the old Georgia darky said: U He’s wuth $1 a day, suh. 9 ) Then he explained his meaning at follows: “You see, boss, I wuz five day* locatin’ whar he lived at, en w’en I finally kotched up wid him hit wuz Sunday, en de preacher seen me, en I wuz turned out de church, so I figgers de value er my time at a dol¬ lar a day—not ter mention de losa er my church standin’ by de possum causin’ me ter fall fum grace, Air lanta Constitution, Go to Miona Springs special weekly rates till Oc¬ tober $7.00 per waek. f Grssk Dory Ham ! Would the reader likealist of Greek j hound names? Xenophon will fur-1 ihJJ h him with a catalogue of forty-’; i seven, most of which flow naturally.j into an English equivalent- active, bustler, ra > '• “nd th %* x ;T Ur i v ' ' ' ■ ;» ' v. i -iiC . ,.d nn . vain for But we ,e m I list, a .000 years still duty in lisii kennels. •ir.Hl.-mV Masrazine. ; Go tO Miona Springs special weekly rates till Oc¬ tober $7.00 per week. , T!:<- Salt In the Oeean. If the ocean did not have scut II I W0U 14 freeze somewhat more readily than it does now, but there would be no very marked difference. The ocean is prevented from freezing not so much by its salt as by its size and by its commotion. On account of its size large portions of it extend into warm climates at all seasons, and by reason of its great depth it is a vast store house of beat. Its currents distribute rnuch warm water among the cojd.-St Nicholas - SI 1 NV 18 1 V 931 | mas 3 m Tsanbar nodu aarj paijsnunj ‘sinroj Ahjg pu« pajpumj omj jo.\o jo 3«xj n b'uiuiBinoo ‘Sojajwo anQ. D •soaud ;s3.woi sqi jb ‘saidoa !' m: snoq,J V 04 Xdoo ajhiiTS v mojj ‘.f; ^ vnillb u ? uoX ‘S:(I 1 V[{| [sfls'I JO ^OOJS 3 } 3 [dU!O 0 B ({JIM aayjo atio paddmbs X[;u»o^i »*«q H SJIMWIfl 1V031 ^ 11 3 S 3 M i The Two Cent || W . Tfi* enactment o t the two cent senger Governor tariff Johnson’s law was am examJ , Invited celerity Minnesota” of 1011 to addrese the Mb ' torlal association. Instead of rajiidjj the usual platitudinous- address on occasions, -he exploded u . * k the two feat bomb” and urged that am end be the giving of passes, Ue Wt to the same subject talked OB to a eon vt 'iitiuj ot commercial tin velers. BmtiieiUate)* Hu state was tUhune with Shis- iuuovaMoa In in tun* railway met legislation he asked When the w? lug this idea, and the legislature a law eiaUdi ly responded. Neighboring ipUtt lowed with states f 0 i red.uctU>m, fSi and now throughout the middle- * Invest tl» two cent rate prevails. About ume Governor Johason came into .-;.:ce there was a wide. spread ugita :on for reciprocal demur, r i a w s which would compel rail- 1 ways to allow shippers demurrage charg os for failure to. deliver cars on time. Governor Johnson. ever abreast of popular progress, recommended such a law and got it. Thanks to his initiative, the orders of the Minnesota railroad and ware house commission are now immediate ly effective pending appeal. In Defense of Labor. Governor Johnson, in cousonance with his thorough democracy has’not and be. lieving in equal rights, bees neglectful of the interests of labo-r. He desired a free state employment bu¬ reau designed to eliminate the many abuses that have marked private em-’ plo.vment bureaus In the great labor centers of Minnesota. Such a bureau was created and has been thoroughly, helpful and widely' efficient. Since time immemorial that relic o( feudalism, the common iaw doctrineot nonliability of employer to employee for injuries occurring through the negli. gene«|f)f a fellow servant, has prevail, ed in Minnesota as well as in rnaar other states. This ancient rule of tin common lav/,” said Governor Johnson, “coupled with the other rule generally, referred to as the doctrine of the u. sumption of risk by employees, has cast upon the individual laborer a risk and responsibility out of proportion to the wages he receives. ft During his term of office Governor Johnson has had to deal with one great conflict between labor and capi¬ tal—namely. the strike of the mined on the Minnesota lroObJanges. advicel By di¬ rect personal intervention, by to the employers on the one hand ana the strikers on the other, the govemotj succeeded without the use of stab troops, in preventing violence and IP COfjF'L pG In the forests and prairies of norm eru yiiU. aesota are great extents ol fertile f lands which, owing to lack oil G r • J £?'-* have not beta available fol , i; :v:;':on. Thanks to Governor John; . ... s'j itioual legislation on this sum et was secured, and hundreds m tool ds of acres of fertile land wilil to the rolls of the state’ll u ■k’Spr Johnson believes in tti . P' . owners hip of public utilities «-.* inoi *51 ■ .-Mowing bis suggestion, a ls*j Si r< inn of tlie Illinois Mueller w;:s ulonted bv the Minnesota legisi lure. Under its provisions a muuiciiffl itv n bond its street railways the cost j oj other pitfclie utilities to pay of tin the purchase nnd operation sa me. Minnesota, a leading agricultu state, has long had to eonteud praeft ffSj the cordage trust, which has a cal monopoly of the binding tww used in harvesting For many ye»j ^ the state lias had a twine plant which orison labor was employed. trust erect o,1 a factory in MinneW to coiupett ■ with the state answer made ttvluj waij and Governor Johnson s with the consent of the legislator pl#i authori at ion for the stati . twine to sell ts product outside as well tt within the state, The cordage trw will now have to tight the cheap r.cs< t state made twine in rShei sta!^ ns well ns at home Toni nffi 1 ' Wit. (jrjogressman Morse of Massac setts s a t dmirer of one Spea^ oc» Heed, to whom he sain , on * sion, “Do you know, Mr. Ke«i people are talking a great deal you for president, nnd I would' pre.^ surprised if they elected you some day ?” “Well, Mcrse,^ vas dry comment of the speai kcr. could do end I have n 11 worse they will. •* In- r»e. Mamma' (at breakfast table) should always use your nap Gcorgie. Georgie—I am u?in? • the dog rf tied te I mamma. I’ve got Golden leg ot the table with it.— HI* i*nr»m*. “May I ask.” inquired the meua l!ls ^ stronger, “what is your P j life?” Sutt , , a ,1 It depends,” replied eomin^^ ^ whether I'm going or the 7:48 train in the mormnS d at night”—Philadelphia A Bit of » wili An Irishman, quarrelinf Englishman, told him if he 1 his tongue he would “break * trable head and let the I* 1 * 1 amptjr ^ofl "