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Ads 8
8
FOR SALE—One ton Ford truck.
Excellent condition, cheap. Joseph
S. Hoge, Macon, Ga. 7-13-tf 8-6 pd.
WANTED—Expert nailer for per
manent position. Stute salary
wanted. Apply Hamburg Broom
Works, Hamburg, Pa. 8-3
ROOMS FOR RENT—$3.00 per
week, furnished. 202 E. Main St.
Phone 9196 Graham Hotel 2t.
SNAPPING INTO IT
Walton Tribune Sees Clifford Walker
Ready for Business
In • statement pulsing argument, with patrl
etlsm, mistakable unanswerable In and burning un¬
in diction
with the eloquence born of * Mon¬ just
sause, Hon. Clifford Walker, of
roe, leading candidate for Governor of
Georgia, Saturday threw Tom down Hardwick, the
laufi of battle to Reiser.” who has
the erstwhile “little bring hie state to
done eo much to
ihamt.—Walto n Tribune .
(Advertisement)
u Felt Like Eating yy
Man and Wife, All Run-Down from Farm Work,
Were Greatly Helped by Ziron.
“M Y WIFE and I, after a hard
spring on the farm, were
tired and run-down,” says
Mr. K. B. Mulkey, of Route 1, Acworth,
Ga. “We neither felt well. I knew my
blood was bad, as 1 had little boils on
the back of my neck.
K “We felt we needed a builder. We
kad heard of Ztrcfri and thought it
must be what we needed. It certainly
was. We took It faithfully, and after
a week or such a matter we began to
feel better. My wife felt like cooking,
**** * 4 * 4 * 4 ¥¥¥¥44 ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥
* *
♦ Residence Lot ★
* ★
* OR RESIDENCE * *
* SALE
* ♦ FOR *
* On East Main Street ★
* *
* Brown *
* The old W. E. place. Pret- *
% * tiest lot in town, showing results of * J
★ many years’ growth. Old and rare
■It shrubs and plants. *
* Faces North-east, giving shady front *
from ten A. M. until night. *
41 if
4i Paved side walk lined with v bi& oak *
4i trees. *
4i *
- 4i 4i oft 110 ft. front, depth 500 desired.Will ft. deep, or also will add cut {
at any *
4t 350 ft. frontage on Pine St. if wanted. *
4i * No inflated price, but will sell at bed
4i rock figures. *
4i 4i
4i 4i Room Or will Residence sell my and just build completed another Nine- £
4i on *
4i the vacant lot. *
W. H. 4t
4t 4i Harris. * *
-41 4t
THE LEADER TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GA., AUGUST 10, 1920.
X'X
Was
m | 1 i Very t
Weak
<« After the birth of my :
baby I had a back-set, >»
writes Mrs. Mattie Cross- W3M
white, of Glade Spring,
Va. II I was very ill;
thought 1 was going to HHp pfjijS
die. 1 was so weak I
couldn’t raise my head to ^
get a drink of water. I - —
took . , . medicine, yet I
didn’t get any better. I
was constipated and very
weak, getting worse and
worse.* I sent forCardui.”
TAKE
The Woman’s Tonic
h I found after one bot- W
tie of Cardui 1 was im- B
proving,” adds Mrs. B Kg
Crosswhite. “Six bot
ties of Cardui and . . . I taw
was cured, yes, I can say Kg |g
they were a God-send to
me. 1 believe 1 would B
have died, had it not been ^
forCardui.” Cardui has B
been found beneficial in B Ip
fy- .many thousands of other
cases of womanly trou- ^ If
3 bles. If you feel the need
I of a good, strengthen- B
I ing tonic, why not try B
I Cardui? It may be just tab
1 what you need. 1§|
All
h* Druggists
^ |$j Js 76
jhj X4X
and I sure felt llkfe eating.
“Ziron sure did us good. It made
us both feel stronger and better for
the fall work, which everyone knows
Is ‘some work’ on a farm. My boils
began to dry up, though just at first
they seemed worse.
“We are much better and can highly
recommend Ziron, and gladly do so for
it sure did us good.”
Ziron is a safe, reliable, tonic medi¬
cine, good for jnen, women and child
ren, when an iron tonic is Indicated.
It is easy to take and contains no
habit-forming drugs.
Ask your druggist or dealer.
RAILWAYS SET NEW RECORDS
FOR FREIGHT MOVEMENT
(Continued from social page.)
562 during the same period of 1918.
These figures show that the rail¬
ways of the country are not only per¬
forming a larger measure of publts
service than they performed during
similar periods of 1919 but that they
are closely approaching the records
made in 1918 when every nerve was
being strained to win the war and
the railways of the South have even
passed the high record made n 1918.
In discussing the heavy business
being handled by American railway*
at this time, the Railway Age in a
recent issue said":
The newspapers are full of re¬
ports regarding industries that are
operated at much less than their
maximum capacity, or are on the
verge of having to close down, be¬
cause of inability of the railways to
handle the traffic offered them. In
spite of the strikes and other trou¬
bles the railways almost continuously
in 1920 have bv>en moving more
freight than in 1919.
4< Why, then, are the industrial op¬
erations of the country being serious¬
ly interfered with and its financial
stability threatened by insufficient
transportaton ? There can be only one
*jte
I I* 1‘j
i
y
S A
* i ii to-. m
Nl •VLv
P \ t'
What’s done as much fill as
the anqthing movie else houses to up
I OOK at the crowds that ing for something that isn’t
^ step out of their cars in there when they look for it.
front of the movies every III
summer evening. What a man pays for in a
The movie managers • tire is quality —not a limited
would be renting half of their number of miles or the privi¬
theatres for store space, if it lege of getting a rebate in
weren’t for the automobile. case the miles don’t come
.
Select your tires ac¬ II up to the limit.
cording to the roads
they have to travel .- It is typical of Americans U. S. Tires are guaranteed
In sandy or hilly coun¬ that they took to the auto¬ quality— with limi¬
try, wherever the going as to no
is apt to be heavy—The mobile matter of tation of mileage.
U. S. Nobby. as a course
roads—The For ordinary U. S. country Chain — just as they have to the And that holds ju^t good
Usco. movies and other as
or to every for the small tire for
For front wheels— invention of the last, car as
The U. S. Plain. X great the biggest U. S. Tire we’ve
For best results U. S. half century. got. There’s only stand¬
everywhere — one
Royal Cords.
m And the same thing‘has ard of quality with U. S.—and
m 1 s happened every time. Taking the size of the car has noth¬
m things as they come is a fine ing whatever to do with it
w
0 way to foster waste and ex¬
9 IV
BCWL C09D-NOB BY-CHAIN-USCO-PlAlfi travagance. U. S. Tires
We represent
a
As regards tires, the come¬ in this town. You’ll find it
back is about due. People worth while to talk to us be¬
are pretty near through pay- fore you buy any more tires.
% %
United States.Tires
H. J. PEAVY & SON, BYRON, GA.
G. L. STRIPLIN & CO., FORT VALLEY, GA.
F. J. & P. R- FREDERICK, MARSHALLVILLE, GA.
i
ritional answer to that question. The
present conditions are partly due to
strikes, but they are mainly due to
the fact that for years the productive
capacity of the country has been
rapidly increasing while the facilities
and capacity of the railways have
been increasing hardly at all.
n Present conditions are principally
chargeable to those who throughout
the years from 1906 to 1917, by
fighting to keep the rates- and net
earnings of the railways on the low¬
est possible level, did all they could
in their respective ways to make it
impossible for the carriers to handle
the country’s commerce.”
LOST—Small silver mesh bag, Sun¬
day, Aug. 1, between Beauty
Square and town. Finder please re¬
turn to Sandford Hartley at Georgia
Agricultural Works and receive re¬
ward.
Quit# the Contrary.
Jennie—So you finally proposed
to her. I suppose ^he said, “This is so
sudden. »>
Jack—No; she said it wasn’t sud¬
den enough. She had accepted Tom
the nigjjt before.—Boston Transcript.
O
Advertising in The Leader-Tri¬
bune brings the desired results.
Short Courae Popular In Fourth
Carrollton.—Attendance at the club
members’ short course at the Fourth
District A. and M. college here breaks
all records for the district, More
than two thousand boys and girls are
here. Instruction for girls includes
basketry, canning, nutrition, health,
poetry, plays and games; while the
boys ar# taught handling of live stock
and farm products and farm manage¬
ment.
Big Still Taken fn Lee County.
Albany.—Two stills with a combined
capacity of 900 gallons, operated in
conjunction with one another and said
by officers to be the largest moon¬
shine outfit ever raided in Georgia,
were seized in Lee connty by Federal
Prohibition Officer Garnett Saye and
a posse. One automobile and a motor
truck said to have the name of an Al¬
bany manufacturing concern painted
on its sides, also were seized, One
negro, who said he was the driver of
the truck, was arrested, but a whits
man and another negro escaped
First Motion Picture.
“Miss Jerry,” the first motion pic¬
ture, was produced in October. author, 18^4.
Alexander Black was the sce¬
nario writer, director, camera man
ind title writer of the picture. At
that time only five stereoptiean slides
i second could lie shown, hut 16 pic¬
tures are now’ flashed on the screen
per second.
\
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i
oood lighting in the work room of
your home, like good lighting in a
factory, makes work go faster and
easier. When you’ve tried better
lighting in your hojne work room
you’ll put better lighting in every
room.
National MAZDA Lampa
in the Blue Convenience Carton,
will bring the results you want.
COPELAND’S PHARMACY
PHONE 140
As the Savannah Press Views
the Gubernatorial Race
Cliff Walker has smoked out Mr.
Tom Hardwick. If he does not
to be “Cliff the Giant Killer,” tota l
showr himself an axpert range lipf
•-Savannah Press.
(Advertisement)