Newspaper Page Text
IIA U 9 f #■ i I
I i 01 a 111 i/ a & Ly! ?
N 1011 —N E
Superintendent John Hunger
lord Relates Remarkable Ex¬
perience. Says Par atone Was
Worth More to Him Than All
, Money in Atlanta.
i
No medicine has ever accomplish¬
ed such startling and magic-like re¬
sults in Georgia as has Puratone dur¬
ing the past few r weeks.
•J. E. Hungerford, superintendent
of the service department of the
Frigidaire Corp., and residing at 257
East North avenue, Atlanta, said:
For nine years my stomach had
been giving me trouble. I had to be
very careful what I ate—in fact, for
a long time I was on a diet of soup.
Gas formed on my stomach so bad it
go: as tight as a drum, and I would
bloat and have awful smothering
spells until I could hardly get my
breath. I felt all stutl'ed up, and
draggy, lazy and tired all the time.
My head ached so bad it seemed
1’ke there were iron bands tied about
my head.
“Then rheumatism set in, and
nearly every muscle in my body
ached.
“: took all kinds of medicines and
wiis treated by - doctors in three
different states, and spent hundreds
of dollars, but nothing did me any
good. I decided to give Puratone a
trial, and it seemed to take hold
right at once. It acted more like ma¬
gic than medicine. I tell you, I feel
like a brand new' man, and am as
s rong as an ox. I sleep like a log
every night and get up mornings
feeling fine and ready for rheumatic! a big!
dav’s work. I haven’t a
RECKONING WITH THE REF
ERENDUM
(Editorial , New r York World
March 12.)
West Virginia’s sensational
fication of the Woman Suffrage A
mendment makes thirty-four States
whose legislatures have thus gone on
record, only two fewer than he nec
C-sary three-fourths. Although the
Governors of Connecticut and Vei-
l! i»i!
© ©
(®) ©
I® ®5l
Spring Time Is Gardening Time And ®f ®!j ®r I
(§) Screen Time. ®j j j
(©)
(©)
Gardening offers healthful recreation and health-giving food. ®fi ®{i
© The fly and mosquito offer annoyance, disease and death. fi!
%
It’s time to cultivate the former and to eliminate the latter. ®! i
% ®{
We are headquarters for Garden Tools, Garden Hose, Hose ® fh s
Nozzles, Sprinklers, Etc. m Si
[©)
We have a complete line of Screen Doors, Screen Door Hard- © IS s
ware and Window Screens. C©j
i®
Georgia Agricultural Works, Hi ©
'5) y HARDWARE a WE’VE GOT IT 19 FURNITURE ©g ©
B C©;
f FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA
w
/=\ ^isi©©©©©®©®©®©©©©©©©©©©©® ©,®.^^
z>y
THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., APRIL 8, l*tO
pends in fact upon the judgment of
the United States Supreme Court in
the Ohio referendum cuse. If that de¬
cision upholds the contention that
where the referedum has been estab
lisehd the people are as much a part
of the legislature as the Senate and
! House, the approval of Ohio not
only, but of several other states,
| will be held in abeyance.
1 The court has already held in
an Ohio case involving the appor¬
tionment of Congressional districts
i that the legislative of the state
; power
I is vested in the people as well as
the General Assembly. As this con¬
troversy embraced constitutional
questions resembling those now
i raised, it would not be astonishing
if ihe forthcoming decree should be
the same. In that ovent, Woman
| Suffrage probably would only be
| postponed, but women could vote for :
i President in November only in the
States in which they have already
gained the franchise.
i -o
CALHOUN COUNTY FARMER’S
EXPERIENCE WITH PEANUTS.
Mr. C. J. Rambo has told the
Ft. Gaines Georgian that Mr. B. L.
Jenkins, of Edison, who operates a
25 mule farm on good land, stated .
to me a few days ago tht in 1919 he j
planted a few more acres in cotton
than in peanuts. He bought $2,000
worth of fertilizer for his cotton, but
used none on his peanuts. He held
his cotton for a while and sold the
round lot for 38 cents, yet his pea
nuts brought him $3,000 more money
than his cotton crop. This $3,000 to
with the $2,000 of cotton
money he was forced to pay for
guano made his peanut crop actually
net him $5,000 more than his cotton ;
He says if he had planted all cotton
and no peanuts he would have lost:
money on the year’s work. As it is j
he calculates that he actually lost
on his cotton.—-Dawson News.
|
Send youi* films where
expert finishing and I
prompt delivery !
count.
Mail orders given special atten¬
tion.
PHOTO ART SHOP
MACON GA.
~
Tells Kemarkable Siory
T-.
y-r ■?
8 - * ■ a
m j* v&-.* .v*fcg
W.k,; ■
'M
p IBIIllS
c>
■U1*T. JNO. HUNGBRFORD
pain about me. In fact, am as well as
any man in Georgia. I have the big
gest appetite you ever saw, and can
eat anything I want. Yesterday for
dinner I ate blackeyed peas. Be
fore 1 took Puratone, such a
would have nearly killed me.
“If I had time, I would like to go
from house to house and tell every
body what this Puratone will do.”
Turatone is sold in Fort Valley by
W. C. Wright, and by one leading
druggist in every town. If there is
no Puratone dealer near you Pome
roy & Company, Atlanta, Ga., will
fill your orders at $1.04 per bot
tie postpaid.
mont stoutly refuse to call special
sessions, the General Assemblies r.f
Delaware and Washington are to
meet this month and favorable Ac¬
tion is confidently expected.
It has been held, therefore, that
West Virginia s decision was vi
tal to the prospect of universal suf
frage for women at th^ I’residenVal
election, but, to say nothing of le
gel comnlications in th.it State, the
immediate gueeess of the cause de-
“I Never Knew You Could Keep Rat*
Out of a Butcher Shop. I»
What Ralph Watkin* Say*: “Fig¬
ured rats around store had enough
to feed on; wouldn’t touch anything
suspicious. Heard about RAT-SNAP,
gave it a trial. Results were won¬
derful. Cleaned all rats out in ten
days. Dogs about store night and
day never touch RAT-SNAP.” Three
sizes, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Sold and guar¬
anteed by Georgia Agricultural
Works and Copeland’s Pharmacy.adv.
•o
Age has only one heartache— .hr
bitter knowledge that it can no long¬
er feel the heartaches we suffered in
youth.
-o
MICK!E SAYS
OEOGJNG BN -VUE LETTERS
TUAN G\T HUNG OP AT THE
FOSf OFFICE PER ADDRESS EU
POSTAGE, WITH Novum’ ONThE V
ENVELOPE 305 THE POSTN\AST£R
To, rim \ TELL Su’d VMHO Think TO RETURN »t ’EWt j j
snoulo /
as A GOOD »OEA FKR EVtRN
BOON X HAVJE us PRtNT 'EM \
A BOX OP ENVELOPES nN\TH
V THEIR NAKAE AND ABDR68* i
UP \N ONE CORNER /
f f
w
f
5f7
)
2 4
tsm*
FORSTER NATIONAL
PARKS—ALASKA TOUR.
Fifty days of, sightseeing among
the greatest scenic wonders of the
world, in standard Pullmans, first
class steamships, with stops in the
National Parks and sighteeeing
at various points. Under
leadership of an experienced
tourist conductor. For detailed in¬
formation, write or apply to Miss
Annie England, High School, Fort
Valley, or Chas. R. Forster, Lanier
High School, Macon, Ga. Adv.
\
f S\ ->w
m I dl
1 jSSfi***-’
0 m Ml, \1)
* l| M ’
M m :>'
j %
/■
? ar $
i
TKe —
man with money keeps it
in tke Bank where it is safe
from fire or burglars or his
! own extravagance.
When you carry your money in your pocket the
temptations and chances to spend !t are very great.
i Greater than you think, for a few doilars here and there
to borrowers and for things you don't actually need,
I soon melt your pile away.
«
Put your money in the Bank. It is safe there.
Add to your balance every cent you can spare, Scon
i you’ll be "a man with money.,’
Put YOUR money in OUR bank.
THE EXCHANGE BANK
Fort Valley, Ga.
**.****** * * ****★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
T- FOR SALE
* *
* SOO Acres $115.00 Acre $11,500 *
* *
* I offer for short time 100 acres perfectly level land d miles *
■k of Reynolds on good road tor above price. Best Peach and ♦
■R Pecan land in Georgia Not an acre of waste land. See me *
at +
once. MONTGOMERY, *
* C. M. *
* Reynolds, Ga.
* *
9444 * * * * * * **¥*¥¥