Newspaper Page Text
THE LEADER TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., APRIL 27, 1920.
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C enUal Geoi^ia Railway of ii
THE RIGHT WAY
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V- I RAGS
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t H I ~ j WANTED!
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m We need rags for rleaning press¬
11 i es. it would be an accommodation
Dj to us if anyone having such to spare
rl n would ’phone us. We will gladly
Hi 1 tor them and will pay 10c per
to
l ound for such can use.
as we
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Only rags which have been
washed will be accepted.
hi THE LEADER-TRIBUNE X
Phone 119
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L. G. tUTlLDEn son J
Tori Valiev, Ga.
Phone 236-L
Make Wells— Pipe Wells—Made with
■ I Skihed Labor, Made Right, made with soi
I io brass strainers—no gavze wire strainers
J
used. n tact, everything used is ot the
best material and of the longest duration.
Anybody needing water will be benefit
led by seeing them before having work
<i done.
i
It’s a mark of good judgment
to read the Leader-Tribune; it’s a
mark of good principles to sub- j
sc/iD3 for it.
WE~ aggrasg' ■T ^rsbt- ^-z-jsjsr ^-jfcj 'Miff aer
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A PHILIPPINE TRAVELOGUE
:sr_- Mm THE EAST. beauty ROMANTIC PICTURF8 and historic ISLANDS OF THMR OF spots—be N ■£ TfURAL FAR rr'i
u COMING A MECCA FOR TOURISTS AND
iv A POPULAR WINTER RESORT.
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Thp Zigzag on the Way to Baguio. Summer Capital of the Philippine*.
Iff jAROUND TH i WORLD WITH i
THE AMERICAN RED CROSS. %
A'T In Siberia. /I
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Possibly the most Important Red Cross work in Siberia, and one which
itiosi demands Hie coniiinnitue of operations (here, is the campaign against
typhus, (her h stretch of 4,000 miles the American Red Cross has fought
the scourge. Here Is seen “The (.rent White Train,” an autl-fyphus In
st. it ill ion which, with its crew of doctors and nurses and cargoes of drugs,
food and cleansing apparatus, lias saved the lives of thousands.
ADVERTISE! ADVERTISE!
”
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W c 5 y i^rw
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Mo'i
A full assortment of all kinds of
pork just received—tender, juicy
roasts, choice pork chops, nice
clean spare ribs and fine pork
sausages.
We handle only the very best grade
and always have a fresh supply
on hand. %
Stop in and pick out your favorite
kind for a good dinner tonight.
But come early before the best
cuts are sold.
Quality Meat* Honett Weight
r
,
FORT VALLEY CASH MARKET,
E. I . LISENBY, Proprietor. i
126 rl'f'lfTint' ! iPllvPrV . ,
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i $ A NEW
£ Telephone Directory.
*
3 TO PRESS WITHIN THE NEXT FEW DAYS
r i WILL GO
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.
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j: m LET US INSTALL A TELEPHONE FOR YOU NOW
I SO YOUR NAME WILL APPEAR
* EXTRA LISTINGS FOR PRESENT SUBSCRIBERS AND
hi IN CERTAIN CASES. JOINT-USER BE ARRANGED SERVICE. FOR A FOR SMALL NON¬
SUBSCRIBERS. MAY
hi MONTHLY CHARGE.
See Us For Particulars.
PATRONS WISHING CHANGES OR CORRECTIONS
MADE IN THEIR PRESENT LISTINGS SHOULD SEE US AT
ONCE. s
L. > a
Fruit Belt Telephone CO.
| i
Fort Valley CTeorgia.
SaMBWBIBIHBiaHMM MMBBWM j M WW
u;iEiEigiiapiriPii'iriiPtwrsrirti‘tririf;i£U!;iEigie iE , trJ
!sj 31
FOR SALE
Five Passenger Marmon
S5i
AUTOMOBILE
Y ou can drive it home and for
$100.00 to $150.00 more can convert it
into a good serviceable truck.
♦
INQUIRE AT
LlADER-TRIBUNE office
YE EDITOR THREATENED—
AND THEN
-
Isn’t it disappointing when a
low starts to hand vou
and then somebody butts in?
Well, it happened this way.
As ye editor stopped his train of
thought (egotistically speaking) at
the Fort Valley fuel” Cafe Saturday noon
to take on (being a widower, for
this week only, we hope) for the next
up-grade of quill pushing, he espied
his good friend, Mr. a. B. Young,
there discoursing largely and smil¬
ingly, as always, with a table com
panion with reference to the dismal
peach crop outlook.
Doesn’t it do one good to see a
big, tine, portlv, just’ healthy man like
that, who can’t help looking
cheerful even when he’s talking
I gloom? And then again, isn’t it fun
ny how such a real man and a little
i dried-up, gloomy editor will be drawn
! towards each other in bonds of
. friendship that you can’t exactly
plain? Oh, of course, we all like one
another for what we can get from
.one another. Dut then, why do we
! get it in the first place if it isn’t
; because we first like one another?
So you haven’t explained it after til.
■ Well, to resume the narrative,
presently Mr. Young espied us and
arose toweringly and beamingly and
came over to our table, put his hand
in his pocket and pulling out a dol
lar bill said: ‘‘I know I’ve aiready
paid up my subscription, but I want
to tell you that you are giving us
such a gofcd paper 1 consider it is
worth a dollar more than you are
asking for it”—and just then Axel
had to butt in and tell all about how
be advertised Peach County till he
was s0 ) loarse he couldn’t veil any
more, and how his camel’s milk in
the nursing bottle he was
the girls and policemen out of at the
Shriners’ Ceremonial in Columbus
Wednesday got so sour they yvould
n ’*- lu ^e it, and Mr. Young forgot
''’’hat he started to do and slipped
the bill back into his pocket.
“ ever we get a chance to feed
., popular cafe anything’ it
c ,, prop,
J^ e something sourer than Carnp
be .H.s , milk of the previous day's
mixing,
O
AN HONEST-TO-GOC-NESS
PROHIBITION SNAKE STORY,
Since July I last, snake stories
have gone out of favor, in fact, it is
doubtful if any really good snake
stories will ever again trip from the
tongue of maji. Whatever the snake
stories of the future—they will lack
i details as to color and size and will
i not have the intriguing characteii3
j t* c s °f those of pre-prohibition days.
^ th* alcohol is not confiscated—
mus ? ums W ‘H still have preserved
.
specimens.
Secretary and Treasure, W. A. M.
^' Kubber a J*8'bn, company of the Goodyear of California, Tire w’ho and
formerly had charge of the compa
{TV s rubber plantations in Sumatra,
“ as avoided all chance of losing
specimens of three enormous pythons
b - v simply preserving their skins. Gb
tamed . for him by natives while the
v, rubber n?| n jungle cultivation, was being these skins, cleared for
meas
urmg 14, 17 and 21 feet long, have
been tanned by skillful Javanese and
are now kept by Mr. Vaughn as scu
Jungle yenirs , from of his Nature task for of wresting the
needs of mo
dern industry.
o
FOR SALE—Ono Cadillac roadster.
First $200 gats it. E. R. BraddoJt,
Vallay. 4-27-tf4$