Newspaper Page Text
CITY REGISTRATION
NOTICE FOR
Notice is hereby given that, in
cordance with the law, the
tion Book of the City of Fort
for the registration of voters
..open at the office of the City
and Treasurer in the City of
Valley on March 1st, 1920 at
o’clock ft. m. and will remain open
foi registration each and every day
between the hours of 9:00 o’clock a.
m, until 12 noon, and front 2:00
o’clock p. nt. until 5:00 o’clock p. m.,
Sunday excepted, until Wednesday
noon. March 31st, 1920, when it shall
be finally and absolutely closed.
Mo person shall be allowed to reg¬
ister, who, when called upon by the
Clerk and Treasurer, refuses to take
the following- oath, touching- his
right to register, to-wit:
"I do solemnly swear that I am a
citizen of the United States of Amer¬
ica; that I have resided in Georgia
one year immediately preceding this
election and six months within the
corporate limits of the City of Fort
Valley, immediately preceding- the
opening of this registration list, and
it is my intention to remain a resi¬
dent of said City continually until
the day of the election; that I am
twenty-one years of age, or will be
by the day of election, and have
paid all taxes due the (^ity of Fort
Valley; that 1 have made all the
returns required by the ordinances
of the City. That I am qualified
to vote for members of the legisla¬
ture; SO HELP ME GOD. *i
No person will be allowed to vote
in the election to be held for officers
of said city unless their names shall
appear on the Registration Book
L. P. GRAY,
2-2 0-51 Clerk and Treasurer.
PICTURE FRAMING
Have that calendar framed, at
C. B. Cunningham’s Ten Cent Store.
lt-14-tf.
MARY PICKFORD IN ‘ POLLYANNA M
will tprip and compel you, because you know that she is all heart
and soul, all frankness and truth
thi.'t hers is a philosophy of life that makes surliness and petti¬
ness and quarrelsomeness impossible
a philosophy that spells gladness all day long, that preaches it, ■'
doing 1
without the slightest’consciousness on her part that she is ■
anything unusual >r worth while.
Lt as -eg 313 p*»g m iSflSli
W b 1 tJ: Irsw
U^(©j(3)(®){0
©w
© REGISTER
I*
SOME ONE WILL GET OUR PRIZES
Up to this time no one has brought in the right number but we put up these prizes
and mean for somebody to have them. ©,
A $6.00 Aluminum Pitcher. An Automobile Tube. <t>
I© the number selected, Come
To the one having the number nearest to to our store four
% and register the number you have that you think is the nearest and next Monday at
© o’clock we will award to the one having the number or the one nearest to it the above ar¬ ®W
ticles.
© © © u It’s Up To You, 99 Register.
© The time will be here for Screen Doors and Windows, Refrigerators, Garden ©
D soon
© Tools, Garden Hose, New Porch Chairs, Porch Swings, Lawn Mowers.
©
© Look these over when you come down town next time.
©
©■
© Georgia Agricultural Works,
© ii GOT IT 99 FURNITURE
i® HARDWARE WE'VE
FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA
©
m
.Ei
tHE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT V ALLEY GA., MARCH 4, t92«.
WORK A BLESSING.
By FRANCIS H. SISSON,
V r ioe President-Guaranty Trust
of New York.
Work is not a curse. It is a bless¬
ing. It is the cure for all ills, a priv¬
ilege and a benefit. This is borne
out by all the experience of mankind.
In idleness evil grows, and disease.
From idleness all the ills of the world
spring. And so I say that the theory
which has been spread about the
world recently by false prophets, will
do more to undermine, will do more
to destroy, the world's happiness,
than any theory advanced in genera¬
tions, and 1 hope it will die of itself,
as I feel sure it must. Those people
who say that the why to get a larger
share of profits is by reducing the
net production of life, are seriously
wrong in their reasoning. -The man
who believes that he can get a larger
share of the profits by such methods,
is blinded by a mental contradiction
which he has not the wisdom to under¬
stand.
It is only in work that we find
happiness. Happiness is the by¬ ;
product of Work. Man was made to
work. It is onl yin work we find
work. It is only in work we find
growth. No man ever succeeded in
anything worth while, who didn’t
achieve it by work.
o
MOHgy BACK
without qucition if Muni ». Sal
fails in th« treatment of Et zero.
T.-ttrr Ringswtrm.Itrh.iMc IXtj
/j be Como discouraged failed because ot ) <
t reai.xicnta Hunt’s Sal v
has rHievgp hutidtctP Of <U'’
i a»e* You can't lose on o
Money Bach Guarantee T.
t. it at our ri«k TODAY Pi ire **
* n (• - bv
CCPELAND’S PHARMACY
-o—------
If men worked as hard to viimb
the ladder of fame as women lo to
climb the social ladder there would
be fewer failures in the game of life.
1 Vi 7 ?
a\ e C ,
i
i I
f But what more ot't in nations grown
corrupt,
And by their vices brought to servi¬
tude,
Than to love bondage more than lib¬
erty,
Bondage with ease than strenuous
liberty?
WHEN FRIENDS ‘'DROP IN."
A nice little dainty lo serve with a
plain lettuce salad is:
Cheese Biscuits.
0 To a baking pow
/ A \ 1 der mixture add
v\ I 1 grated one-half cheese. cupful Roll of
3 I out to one-third
» inch in tfiickuess
|( X y shape witii a small
cutter dipped in
flour and bake in a hot oven twelve
minutes. It the clit’cse is ready these
biscuits will he ryady to serve in s.ev
tnteen minutes, taking five minutes
for mixing, It is a wiso plan to havo
a bottle of grated cheese always ready
to acid to a -white sauce for toast, to
creamed potatoes, to omelets and va
rious other dishes.
Scrambled Eggs With Smoked Hali¬
but.—Freshen a half-cupful of smoked
halibut by soaking in warm wilt or.
Mix four beaten eggs with a half a
cupful of milk, one-fourth toaspoonful j
of salt, a few dashes of pepper. Melt
one and one-half tnblesponnfuls of
butter iu an omelet pan, add tlie egg
mixture and cook. When half done i
add the halibut, drained from the Wtt
ter, and finish rooking. Turn on
platter and garnish with toast points
Creole Chicken.—This may he pro
pared rhe day yefore and reheated
Cut up a well-cleaned fowl, cover with
boiling water and cook five minutes,
then simmer In a tireless cooker or on
the hack of the range for half an hour
Cook two cupfuls of canned tomatoes
and half a bay leaf 15 minutes, then
sfYain. (’Imp one -mall onion and
cook in (lie bacon fat with minced ha
eon, using three slices; stir constantly
urnll yellow; add the fowl with the
tormto, a tablespoonful of chopped
parsley, two red and two green pep¬
pers out in fine strips and two ten
spoonfuls of salt. Boil five minutes.
return to the fireless or hack of the
range and cool: until the fowl is ten¬
der. This makes a fine casserole dish,
baking in the oven instead of in a
fireles- cooker. When ready to serve
thicken file sauce with flour. Cook
well arid heat all together until very
hot.
....................
j ^ l*. •>,* •. * -1 v
i ;s' &
! figs* <. -
'-Wrf. 1
3^ W m m m.
f* m
v / •j. m wm JP m .
y
m L-fr? - riff? m 'iim
! t^3 m 13
fl
J
I c m
ft? 8 >35 i
0 m 'Ji
in ktftfi % 5
m i* m
r m j
<S 'CihiJ. \ dm-**
0 6
V rt's
t
4 eggs W
C* >
© Jfu\ AS v
-X i
^ r
(©) Ax.
0 .4
)=
v?
©
© MARY PICKFORD
^
Gomes to Us at Last in
ii Pollyanna
One of the great stories for which the amusement loving world has
long waited, From Eleanor H. Porter’s novel, “ Pollyanna “Pollyanna »»
is the High Priestess of Optimism, She is the 33rd degree exploiter of the
silver lining. She is full of adtion, sparkle and pathos, and will help you to
^ turn your sorrows, big or small, into gladness.
THE FRANKLIN
FORT VALLEY, GA.
Thursday and Friday, Mar. 4th 15th
Admission 25 and 30c