Newspaper Page Text
OCTOBER 28, 1920.
Southern Railway System
Atlanta-Cincinnati 1 Atlanta-Memphis
Lv. Atlanta 4:35 p. m. 5:35 a. m. Lv. Atlanta 4:30 p. m. G :15 a.
* Ar. Chattanooga 9:30 p. m. 10:35 a.m Ar. Birmingham 10:30 p.m.
Ar. Louisville 8:00 a. m. 9:35 p. m. Ar. Memphis 7:35 a. m. 8:00 p.
Ar. Cincinnati 8:10 a. m. 9:20 p. m. Ar. Kansas City 7:10 a. m. 10:25
Ar. Chicago 5:35 p. m. 7:50 a. m. Ar. Meridian 4 :55 a. m.
Ar. Detroit 4:00 p. m. 7:10 a. m. Ar. Vicksburg 9:50 a. m.
Ar. Cleveland 3:55 p. m. 7:20 a. m. Ar. Shreveport 5:40 p. m.
Through sleeping cars and coaches Through coaches and
to Cincinnati and Chicago. Dining cars to Memphis and Kansas
cars. Dining Cars.
Atlanta-Valdosta-Jacksonville Atlanta-Bruns wick-Jacksonville
via Cordele and Valdosta via Jesup
Lv. Atlanta 7:50 a. m. 7:00 p. m. Lv. Atlanta 10:50 p. m. 12:05 a.
Ar. Cordele 2:40 p. m. 12.59 a. in. Ar. Lumber City 5:55 a. in. 6:40
Ar. Tifton 4:25 p. m. 2:40 a. m. Ar. Jesup 8 :00 a. m. 8 :35 a.
Ar. Valdosta 6:03 p. m. 4:15 a. m. Ar. Brunswick 9:40 a. m.
Ar. Jacksonville 10:25 p. m. 8:30 am Ar. Jacksonville 10:50 am 11:20
Local Atlanta-Jacksonville and Local Atlanta-Jacksonville
Atlanta-Valdosta Sleeping car, first Atlanta-Brunswiek Sleeping
class Day Coaches. first class Day Coaches.
Atlanta-Macon
Lv. Atlanta 7:50 a. m. 12:20 p. m. 5:00 p. m. 7:00 p. m. 10:50 p. m.
Ar. Macon 11:59 a. m. 3:00 p. m. 8:10 p. m. 9:25 p. m. 1:25 a. m.
Pullman Observation Parlor car or Pullman Sleeping Car on
trains. First class Day Coaches.
(i The Southern Serves The South
For Full information, rates and reservations, write the following
representatives:
G. C. Robson, T. P. A. V. L. Estes, D. P. A. J. S. Bloodworth, T. P. A.
48 North Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga.
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Their Medicine Chest For 20 Years
I T and folks back “three is thoughtfully after ov score characteristic r the they years days pass and live that the ten,” them are allotted to gone look of
over.
I find myself, at seventy-one, frequently when
drifting back a quarter of a century,
I see myself in the little drug store I owned
at Bolivar, compound Mo., making to and friends selling and a
customers—what vegetable then my known only
was as
Dr. Lewis’ Medicine for Stomach, Liver
and Bowel Complaints.
For many years while X was perfecting my
formula I studied and investigated the
laxatives and cathartics on the market and
became convinced that their main fault
was not that they did not a on the bowels,
but that their action was too violent and
drastic, which and due upset to the the fact system that of they the user;
was wero
not thorough enough in their action, some
aimply acting on the upper or small intes¬
tines, while others would act only on the
lower or large intestines, and that habit they
almost invariably augmented produced a re¬
quiring doses.
I believed that a preparation to produce
the best effect must first tone the liver,
then acton the atnmach and entire alimen¬
tary system. If this was accomplished, mild, but the
medicine would produce a
thorough elimination of the waste without
the usual sickening sensations, and make
the user feel better at once.
After" experimenting with hundreds of
different compounds, I at last perfected the
formula that is now known as Naturs's
Rsmsdy, which I truly believe goes further
COPELAND’S PHARMACY
IS TONIGHT- Tomorrow Get a 25^ Box Alright SS 'ACTS STOMACH. ON a .* THf 53 t MEDIC ** H J* INE LCWF, corgi! •
GOOD PAY FOR THOSE WHO
WILL LEARN PRINTING
The Southern Newspaper Publishers’ Association has found ¬
ed at Macon, Ga., in connection with the Georgia-Alabama Busi¬
ness College, a VOCATIONAL SCHOOL for teaching young
men and young women how to operate typesetting machines. The
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Ask the publisher of The Leader-Tribune for any desired information.
FOR PROSPECTUS ADDRESS:TYPESETTING DEPARTMENT,
Georgia-Alabama Business College
(Accredited)
EUGKNK ANDERSON Macon, Georgia
President
REPUBLICANS AND THE FARM
ERS
“During the eighteen months the
Republicans controlled the Senate
and House, they failed to make ade¬
quate appropriations to take care of
the agricultural interests of the
country. In the last Congress, with
the Republicans controlling the
mittees on Agriculture in House and
Senate, they reduced the appropri
ations requested by a Democratic
Department of Agriculture over sev
en million dollars, and reduced the
appropriations provided for by a
Democratic Congress approximately
two million and a half dollars. They
cut out and reduced appropriations
that were necessary to preserve the
livestock interests of the country.
and does more than any laxative on the
market today. The thousands ot letters
from users have convinced roe I was right,
aud that the user o/ Nature's Remedy as a
family medicine, even though he may have
used it for twenty-five years, never baa
to increase the dose.
Mv knowledge of medicine and the re¬
sults of its use in my own family and
r. tier.;: ir.y friends, before I ever offered it
for sale, caused me to have great faith in
Nature’s Remedy from the very first.
And cowan I Cud ir.y.ylf nearing the ago
when I must bow to the inevitable and go
to another life, my greatest letters pleasure that each is to
tit each day ana read the
mail brings from people as old or older
than I, who tell of having used Nature’s
r.meth’ for ten, fifteen their and twenty children years, and
and how they and
grandchildren have been benefitted by it.
It is a consoling thought, feel that my friends, aside for
a man at my age to from
his own fellow success, one My has greatest done something satisfac¬
for his man.
tion, my greatest happiness today, is the
knowledge that tonight more than one
people will take a Nat .«’* Remedy
happier (NR Tablet) and for will it, be I better, hope healthier, You
people will
be one of them.
(/y^K7 t
A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO.,
St. Louis. Mo.
They refused to provide adequate
propriations to encourage and
the American farmer in the
tioq^ conservation and sale of
crops,
> . Senator Harding was one of
conspirators in the Senate
the American farmer, and while
of the Democratic party
the hearty co-operation of a
cratic administration were
the fight for weeks in the
Congress to prevent, the present
ditions against which the
farmer and stockman are now
ing, Senator Harding and his
tionary Republican friends in
Senate and the House were
glhg our every statement and
structing our every effort,
Pat Harrison.
THE LEADER-TR1BU.NE, FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA
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; W 4* m grows. New territory is do
I v S j/i veloped, new bottling plants
m W ^•L^> are opened, new advertising / I
campaigns are launched, and UA
I thousands of new customers
stfe are added to the millions whu \
/ ' already prefer I i
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TRUCE IN BRITISH STRIKE
Belief Is General That Settlement
May Be Reached At An
Early Date
Loudon.—The threatened sympathet¬
ic strikes of the railway men and the
transport workers in support of the
striking coal miners, which would
have forced virtually all the indus¬
tries of Great Britain to shut down, '
have been postponed pending renew
ed negotiations between the govern¬
ment and the miners, which will be
inaugurated when Premier
George meets representatives of the
miners' executive committee in an at¬
tempt lo arrive at a basis of settle¬
ment.
This decision was reached after a
('ay of conferences, the premier hav
ing sent a letter to Frank Hodges, of
the Miners’ Union, suggesting the
meeting. Thereupon the railway men
at tiie request of ihe miners suspend¬
ed action in order that, in the words
of J. li. Thomas, general secretary of
the National Union of Railway Men,
“every hope of peace might be ex¬
plored without difficulty being added
by a railway strike.”
Mr. Thomas, in announcing the sus¬
pension of the strike notices, pending
negotiations between the miners and
the government, said the miners had
given another indication of their anx¬
iety for peace and that it was for ev¬
ery one to help toward an honorable
settlement.
The transport workers had mean¬
while, it is understood, decided to
await further action until the meet¬
ing of the parliamentary committee
of the Trades - Union Congress, al¬
though no official statement was
made to this effect.
A hopeful feeling prevailed here. W.
C. Bridgeman, the new minister of
mines, It is understood, had prepar¬
ed a fresh formula designed to make
the government’s coal output propos¬
als look more attractive to the min¬
ers, and Mr. Ldloyd-George will put
this formula before the miners’ repre¬
sentatives.
ENVOYS OF FOREIGN
COUNTRIES MAY IMPORT
ALL LIQUOR THEY WANT
State Department Protested Against
Interference With Baggage
Of Diplomats
Washington.—The customs service
has receded from its position with re¬
spect to the importation of liquor by
the diplomatic representatives of for¬
eign countries.
( Officials of the service say that not
j only can the diplomats themselves
I bring liquor into the country, but that
liquor consigned to them on shipment
piust be admitted. Such consigp-
meats to diplomats already in the
I country, however, can be removed
from the port only by a diplomat
I a member -of his household, it is
held.
The state department publicly pro
i-tested against the interference with
the baggage of diplomats, and it is
believed that the new ruling by the
I treasury department will close the in
! cident which, for a time, threatened
! to result in a row between the de
I partments.
FOUR HUNDRED THOUSAND
DOLLARS MONTHLY REQUIRED
j ' TO RUN LEAGUE OF NATIONo
I Brussels, Belgium.—The sum of four
hundred thousand dollars monthly will ’
be required to run the league of na
tions next year, according to the bud
j approved by the council of the
league here, This budget will be pre¬
sented to the league assembly at its
coming seession in Geneva.
Alter making appropriations and ap
proving a vast outlay aggregating
$3,750,000, of which $1,250,000 will bo
spent by the international Labor liu
reau, the council resumed its discus
sion of ways and means of protecting
minorities.
The organization period of the
league up to July last cost $1,250,000,
and for the second half of this year
the budget provides for $2,500,000.
Louisiana Rail Board Investigation
Washington.—-A hearing to investi¬
gate the action of the Louisiana rail
road commission in refusing to permit
freight and passenger rate increases
within the state similar to the ad
vance granted for interstate traffic
has been ordered by the interstate
commerce commission for November
22 at Baton Rouge.
2 Persons Killed In Auto Accidents
Greensboro, N, C,—J. E. Webster,
72, formerly a probate judge of Gaff¬
ney, S. C., was killed and his wife
probably fatally injured here when an
automobile struck them.
Earthquake Shakes Spanish Town
Granada, Spain.—An earthquake
shock lasting ten minutes was felt
recently throughout this province. The
damage done in some villages was
small, but whether there were any
casualties is not yet known.
Battle Between Soldiers And Sailors
Port Elizabeth, Cape Colony.—Four¬
teen persons were killed and about
thirty wounded in a clash between na¬
tives and troops and police recently,
following the arrest of Masalababa,
president of the native workers’ un
ion. The fighting began when a
crowd tried to rescue the union pres
ident from the police station. After
two or three vuin attacks the
succeeded in entering the
whereupon the police called for
soldiers who fired upon and
qd the mob.
PLANNINS TO EXPORT COTTON
Capital Subscriptions Will Be
On An Assessment Of One
Dollar A Bale
Washington.—Plans for the organi¬
sation of a twelve million dollar cot¬
ton export and crop financing corpo¬
ration were adopted at a meeting here
of bankers and representatives of cot
ton interests attending the convention
of the American Bankers’ association,
J’he meeting approved suggestions
contained in a report of a committee
headed by Robert F, Maddox of At
lauta, to move at once in the direc¬
tion of preliminary steps towards or
ganizing the corporation. Tentative
arrangements provide for the payment
of half the capital stock or an hiiLial
working fund of five million dollars
capital and one million dollars sur¬
plus.
Capital aunbscriptions, the plans
suggest, will be based on an assess¬
ment of $1 a bale on cotton raised
in the r-espective states, thereby mak¬
ing the organization one of influence
throughout all territory which has had
difficulty In financing the movement
of the cotton crops. The decision to
call for the initial payment of only
half of the total capital means, there
tore, that the subscriptions will be pro¬
rated among the purchasers of stock
on the basis of 50 cents per hale.
It was made clear by speakers at
the meeting that the purposes of the
corporation, which will be organized
under the Edge act, is not to hold
tke cotton crop, but to insure that the
commodity be moved “at a time when
the market is stagnant.”
Under the provisions of the Edge
act, the corporation is enabled to han
lie trade acceptances agreement
of the purchasers — to the amount
of ten times its capital and surplus,
in the case of the proposed corpo
ution, the ability to handle accept¬
ances of cotton purchasers to
amount of sixty million dollars, Al
(hough there was no specific mention
made, there are indications that
mation of (he corporation will ininie
iiately open the way for Lhe sale
cotton in Europe, where the demand
s estimated at three million to four
million bales.
PROHIBITION DEFEATED
BY 15,000 MAJORITY
IN BRITISH COLUMBIA
Vancouver, B. C.—Repudiation of
the British Columbian prohibition
law, indicated by the .5,007 majority
PAGE FIVE
already n corded, brought government
afftciais to consideration of how the
liquor traffic shall be administered.
The vote was on the preference be¬
tween prohibition and “an act to pro¬
vide for government control and sale
in sealed packages of spirituous and
malted liquors.’’
BANKERS CHARGE
FEDERAL RESERVE
WITH UNFAIRNESS
Washington.—While a survey of the
1
: financial policies of the government,
' by Secretary Houston, drew the atten
tion of delegates at the general ses
sion of the American Bankers’ associ
Lion convention, the bankers, in their
section meeting which followed,
brought administration of the federal
reserve system under fire. They
at i op t e rl resolutions “condemning and
deprecating methods employed by the
board” in its relations with state
banks which are not members of the
reserve system, although the board
lid not lack defenders during the dis
cussion.
No Cotton in 1921 Scheme Indorsed
Greenville, S. C.—Resolutions were
passed by farmers of the state at Sum¬
ter calling for the governors of all
| the cotton growing states to call a
j special session of their legislatures
j to pass laws prohibiting the planting
of cotton in 1921 on account of boll
weevil and because the present sup
ply is greater Ilian the demand.
Bankers Select Committeemen
| Washington.—The nominating corn
mittee of the American Bankers’ asso
| ciation made its report to the conven
j Lion. Only one slate of candidates
! for officers had been prepared.
!
Bombs Found At Milan, Italy, Hotel
Milan.—A bag containing five
bombs, two tubes of explosives and
! several pounds of material for shrap¬
nel, was found under a bench in a pub¬
lic garden near the Hotel Cavour,
where bombs recently were exploded
Ywo Per Cent Decline In Foodstuffs
Washington.—The decline in the re¬
tail price of foodstuffs during Septem¬
ber was placed at two per cent by the
department of labor’s bureau of labor
statistics In its monthly report on
food costs.
“Sell It South” Is South's Slogan
New Orleans.—“Sell it south” was
adopted as the keynote and slogan of
the $25,000 advertising campaign
southern newspapers are to use to ad¬
| vertise the South iu other sections.
j >