The Leader-tribune and peachland journal. (Fort Valley, Houston County, Ga.) 19??-192?, January 29, 1920, Image 7
a a a a w- a i.» 1 r a ••f a a a a a a a a a a i I at ■
I H r GROCERY STORE
BUY WHERE YOUR CASH COUNTS
WE DON’T MEET PRIOES-WE MAKE ’EM
When you want the most (or your money that you can buy, come to our store. All
of our stock is new, fresh and first class. W E want your business-Y O U need our
groceries. Come in and see for yourself. Our prices can’t be beat under the self-serve
r* *r or cash and carry plan. SPECIALS ON FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY
On Friday, Saturaay and Monday we will offer specials that will be worth coming miles to take advantage of.
WE TEACH YOUR DOLLARS TO HAVE MORE CENTS
MRS. J. C. NEWBERRY, Proprietor PHONE 20S MAIN 56 STREET
a I K a K a IS IS & 'S i 31 I a •;»; e Wl e “ ST a ■h Ur a a a a 1
ft; A
$ l tf» £ I
LAKEV1EW SCHOOL NEWS
By “Blue Eyes. M a a
a
“KOW DID YOU DIE?’’
Did you tackle the trouble that came
your way
With a resolute heart and cheerful?
Or hide your face from the light of
day
With a craven soul and fearful?
Oh, a trouble’s a ton or a trouble’s
an ounce,
Or a trouble is what you make it,
And it Ln’t the fact that you're
that counts,
Bui only how did you take it?
You are beaten to earth?
Wall, well, what’s that?
Come up with a smiling face;
It’s nothing against you to fall down
flat,
But to lie there—that’s disgrace.
The harder you are thrown, why the
higher you bounce;
Be proud of ybur blackened eye.
It isn’t the fact that you’re licked
that counts;
It’s how did you fight and why?
And though you be done to the death,
what then?
If you battled the best you could,
If you played your part in the world
of men,
Why, the critic will cal! it good.
Death comes with a crawl or comes
with a pounce,
And whether he’s slow or spy,
It isn’t the fact that you’re dead that
counts,
But only how did you die?
—Edmund Vance Cook.
Mr. A. W. Tabor spent Friday in
Macon on busine S3.
Masters Lewis and Dreyfus Foun¬
tain spent Saturday with Jack Dent.
Misses Carrie Holcomb and Nolia
Relle Smith spent Saturday after
noon with the Lakeview Jewels.
The weather being so pretty, Mr.
Jce Henry Pender took a crowd of
the school girls out for a spin Friday
afternoon, chaperoned by “Teensy”
and “the Professor.”
Quite a crowd of young folks en
joyed the pour.d party which was
given at Mrs. Pitt Smith’s Friday
night, Games and music were en
joyed until a late hour, after which
dainty refreshments were served.
Those who enjoyed the hospitality of
Mrs. Smith were: Misses Mattie Lou j
and Bobbie Lee Howard, Ella and i
Clar.t Bee Pcndler, Willie Lee and
Lorena Stalnaker, Carrie Holcomb,
EdJ 1 Sullivan, Rosa Nell O’Neal,
Nolia Belie Smith and “ the Lakeview
Jewels.” Messrs. Leonard and Lewis
Avera, Johnnie' and Willie Pat Sul
livan, George and Neal Hardy, Kim
ball and Otis Smith, Lewis Hartley,
Clyde Holcomb, Thomas Turner, Joe
Henry Pender, “Teensy" Hartley, R
C. Aultman, D. W. Whitmire and
Willie Joe Brantley.
J..'. u. ii. Holcomb spent Friday
■
in Macon on business.
Messrs, Frank Aultman and Hor
ace Giles spent one day last week in
Cairo, Ga.. bringing up pecan trees,
While there they took advantage oi
*
THE LEADER TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA„ JANUARY 29, 1920.
the bird season, bringing back
ty-five or more birds.
Quite a crowd of young folks en¬
joyed a musical entertainment giv¬
en at Miss Ruby Tucker’s Saturday
night,
Miss Nolia Belle Smith spent Eri
day afternoon in Byron.
Mrs. D. B. Holcomb spent Wednes¬
day afternoon with Mrs. Otis Grier.
i Master Jack Dent spent Sunday
Lewis Fountain.
Farmers are now quite busy spray
ing, trimmin and setting fruit
trees.
Miss Willie Lee Stalnaker spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mrs A. W.
Tabor. 1
Miss Grace Smith spent +, ie week¬
end with homefolks.
Masters Fred and Willie Stalna
ker spent Saturday with Joe Elbert
Stalnaker.
Mr. Thomas and Ralph Turner
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J.
L. Morris.
Mrs. N. J. Jackson and daughters,
Evelyn and Gladys, attended Sardis
Sunday.
Miss Lizzie Arnold spent the week
i net with Miss Julia Johnson.
Mrs. R. W. Long ha, ! as her week
.ml guest, her daug tev. Mrs. N. C.
Marshall.
Mr. Houser and Arthur White
:pent Sunday with Mr. Willie John¬
son.
Quite a crowd of young folks
;pent a pleasant evening Saturday
with Miss Julia Johnson.
Mrs. S. W. Hardison spent Satur¬
day afternoon in Perry.
"Messrs. Elmer Bryant, Emmitt
Tucker and Arthur White called
upon Misses Ruby and Grace Tuek
ar Monday night.
-o
WO MAM’S CHRISTIAN
TEMPERANCE UNION.
On January 23rd, at the home of
Mrs. B. H. Fincher, the Ft. Valley
Woman’s Christian Temperance
Union held the first regular meeting
for the current year.
The program was devoted to the
study of the uses and abuses of al
chol and alcholic beverages as a med
icme.
The verdict of a numerous com¬
pany of successsful and eminent
physicians was shown to be unan
imously opposed to the use of alchol
in any form, in the treatment of
disease. By request of those attend¬
ing the meeting, a very few of 1 e
large numbr of authorized stats
menis of well known physicians are
given here for publication-:
. . Alcohol is not a heart stimulant.
It has no tonic action. Alchol
causes a patient to feel betief only
by its strong narcotic effect, and
this feeling of betterment is later fol
by the depress; 11 ol all vital
activities, namely, ther-j is mental
weariness, circulatory weakness, loss
of appetite, and impaired
of all internal secreting glands. Al
cohol as a drug is only rarely needed
in the treatment of disease, and then
KC W1 B I W K; gwtflw .S I M B M B M
l*MUKZ£U&1 leaowi
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You can well do so because these small Good¬
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that of other tires in the same types and sizes.
1 ’ Go to the nearest Goodyear Service Station
i Dealer for these tires, and for Goodyear
HP Heavy Tourist Tubes. He supplies many
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ac. ,tt ;: a
only in small amount and for a short
time, much as a physician would use
any other narcotic or circulatory de¬
pressant drug.”—OLIVER T. OS¬
BORNE, Professor of Therapeutics,
Yale Medical School.
Dr. Howard A. Kelly, of John Hop¬
kins Medical School, Baltimore, in a
recent address to about 1,500 med
; ical students in Philadelphia, advis¬
ed them never to prescribe alcholic
liquors for their patients, despite the
advise of older physicians, who, he
declared, prescribe liquor from habit.
Dr. Charles H. Mayo, one of the
famous Mayo surgeons of Roche Her.
Minnesota, in his presidential ad
dress before the American Medical
Association, 1917, said: “Medicine
has reached a period when alcohol
is rarely employed as a drug, being
displaced by better remedies. Al
cohol’s only place now is in the arts :
and sciences.” j
!
“I believe that in the scientific j ;
light of the presfent era alcohol j
should be classed among the anaes- i
tljetics and poisons, and that the
man family would be benefited by
its entire exclusion from the field
remedial agents.”—Dr. J. S. Cain,
dean of the Faculty, Medical Depart
ment, University of the South, Se
wanee, Tenn.
“No one who has closely mvestigat
e< ^ the action of alchol in recent
years prescribes alcohol. Every one
will feel relief when it is abolished. >>
—Sir Victor Horsley, England’s
greatest Neurological Surgeon.
—o
Read The Leader-Tribune for
news.
PEOPLE ARE CALLING FOR OLD
ACCOUNTS WITH INTEREST.
A well-known shoe merchant, who
for several years has done a strictly
cash business, states that people are
calling for accounts of long standing,
some as far back as eleven years,
figuring the interest and making set¬
tlement in full. He is of the opin¬
ion that general prosperity as well
as old fashioned honesty is respon¬
sible for the cancelling of debts so
long past.
Dawson New*,