The Leader-tribune and peachland journal. (Fort Valley, Houston County, Ga.) 19??-192?, November 04, 1920, Page PAGE TWELVE, Image 12

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PAGE TWELVE 8 WANT 8 8 Ads 6 ti RATES: One time, 7c a line; additional time when ordered in vance, Ge a line. When replies are be received care this paper per line additional IS for service. All-cap lines headlines double rate. No tisement taken for less than 25c. Cash must accompany orders those who do not have monthly accounts with us. Answer advertisements just as ad vertisers request. We cannot names of advertisers or other formation not contained in the vertisements. FOR SALE—Two milk cow». W. Braswell. LUMBER—See us for prices. Z. Williams & Sons. 9-23-2p FOR SALE—Desirable building on Anderson Ave., near in. E. Spillers. WOOD—Slabs; two-horse load at mill, one dollar. Flournoy Place. Alfred Hume, Jr. 10-28-4t pd. LUMBF.R—Long-leaf pine. Mill Old Flournoy Place. See R. J Rowell for prices. Alfred Hume, Jr. IO-28-4t pd. FOR SALE—Red skin Spanish pea nuts. Hand picked for seed, immediate delivery. L. R. Crest View Farm. FOR RENT—Good four-horse W. C. Fagan. FOR RENT—One six room with water and lights in West Phone 110-J. 10-28 FOR SALE—One Dozen new barrels, never used, 35 gal. L. R Prator, Crest View Farm. WANTED—by an experienced position as foreman on peach general farm, or will work on centage or share basis. Twenty experience; good reference. P. O. Box 233, Fort Valley, Ga. 10-28-lt pd. £ s £ £ ! £ Alfred Hume, Jr. Cornelius Hall £ £ !i Announce £ £ £ £ £ fi ! £ £ £ The Opening Saturday, November 6 £ £ £ on i £ £ £ of I £ £ £ £ £ £ THE TIRE SERVICE STATION £ Free Service at Station. Free Road Service. £ I £ s f! A complete line of BARNEY OLDFIELD and HOOD Tires. £ ! ! 1 £ ! i Vulcanizing of Tires and Tubes £ ! £ £ i ! We have bought the Business and Good Will of the Fort Valley Vulcanizing Co., and ! £ H 5J ready do business location f ! £ are now to at our new I f Corner Macon and Main Streets. £ ft £ £ ! ! When need AIR in tires, WATER in radiator, OIL in engine, £ £ HJ you your your or your £ £ Come By and See Us. ! £ ! ! & £ ,3P H I Ei I FOR SALE—Red and green »ecd cane, in the patch. L. R. Prator, Crest view Farm. -o FOUND—One suit case containing Men's clothing. Owner can get j same by proper identification and paying for this notice. W. A .Lyons, * j Chief of Police. ■ STRAYED—To my place Oct. 10, j ° wner caN w,th des ’ j ciption and cash for th., ad. and up¬ keep, and get ..me, A. B. Young, 11-4-lt pd. •o- NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION Notice is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing be tween E. W. Bowman and H. P. San the/., doing business in the City of Fort Valley, Georgia, under the firm name of the Bowman Brokerage Company has this day been dissolved, I by mutual consent. ! H. P. Sanchez retires from the said firm and E. W. Bowman assumes all liabilities of the Bowman Brokerage Company and will receipt for all debts due to said Company. This October 19th, 1920. (Signed) E. W. Bowman (Signed) H. P. Sanchez i 0-28-4t. ■O Three or four years ago it took only 12 Vj pounds of 8-cent cotton to pay for The Leader-Tribune for one year. Today it takes only 12 % i pounds of 20-cent cotton to pay for | jit a year. And you get a whole lot [ i more news and a whole lot better pa per than you did then. And yet, once in a while, some fellow w h<p could buy a dozen newspaper plants like ours says we charge too much for the paper. He can’t see that com¬ pared with the price of everything else, including what he gets for his farm products, we don’t get half what the paper is worth. Ain’t we humans human, though? * -o i MRS. W. J. BRASWELL HEADS t LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE I Mrs. W. J. Braswell lias been ap pointed Chairman of Legislation for the 12th district Federation of Clubs. This is a distinct compliment to Mrs. Braswell and to the Fort Valley His J | tory Club, as women from now are expected to play an important part ! in the legislative affairs of the State and nation. THE LEADER-TRIBUNE, FORT VALLEY, GEORGIA YOUR If You Are Pale and Weak, Ambition, You Need a Tonic. TRY TAKING PEPTO-MANGAN R ich. Red Blood Fights off and Keeps You Well and Enables You to Work With Pleasure Serious sickness often comes you least suspect. You may feel a tle over-tired. You haven’t been ex posed to contagion, yet all of a den you are flat on your back and for a siege of sickness. Your blood did not have fightii qualities. It was weak and thin. vitality and powers of resistance low. When you overdo you use up gy. Your blood is driven to do than it can. It becomes clogged waste. The waste acts like poison. Disease germs get in your blood and dominate. Don’t let yourself get run down. Take that good tonic, Pepto-Mangan. It makes rich, red blood that will re¬ sist and rout out disease germs. Pepto-Mangan is widely and heart. endorsed by physicians. It is ef Active and easy to take. Comes in either liquid or tablet form. Both have the same effect. Sold at any drug store. But be sure you get the genuine Pepto-Mangan “Glide’s.” Ask for it by the name and be sure the full name, “Gude’s Pep to-Mangan,” is on the package. Advertisement, —n WOMAN’S MISSIONARY SOCIETY M. E. CHURCH The Woman’s Missionary Soci ay of the Methodist church will meet Monday afternoon, Nov. 8th, at o’clock. Pub. Supi WHY SHOULD A WOMAN ENTER SERVICE THROUGH THE MIS¬ SIONARY SOCIETY? Why were you horn in a Christian nation, one of a small, highly-favored minority? In China and India alone half the women in the world are born, and when you add the Japanes Turks, Africans, etc., you can set what a large majority of us women i ( - born in non-Christian lands, and what a narrow escape we of the inl¬ nority had- and not by our own thought either! Had St. Paul gone east instead of west, it might all have j been different. China and India might have got around to us with the good news by this time, but who knows, seeing that we ourselves ha'-e only lately reached a few of them! We Are Debtors. If Paul said he was a debtor, wo are, because we are women, a"d Christianity is the only religion that teaches the equality of women with men. To appreciate this, we should live a while under heathenism, which venerates cows but despises women; where to be unmarried is a disgrace and to be married is imprisonment; where a woman’s most ecstatic dream is that she may be reborn as a man, or where, as in some places, a wife is iegai tender and can be rented. There are five hundred millioon women and girls born under those non Christian faiths; they suffer more —physically, mentally, and spiritual¬ ly—than the invaded nations of Eu¬ rope, and there is no Red Cross for them. We Are Able. We think we know what poverty is, j but in the non-Christian world, where . the average wage is ten dollars a year, millions have only one meal a J day, and go to bed hungry—not only ! in war-time, but every night of their J ives If you want to know what war I ^j h has brought to the; me un g er , Orient- cannibalism has appeared in . j Persia. Famished mothers have eaten 1 when , their children! Remember this 1 | j the Here missionary the call with comes cheek to book you. j j J woman a ^ ^ f oum j on | p j n Christian lands 1 —can help. Consider what a blessed thing it that we who can never go in person i to these whose lives we long to brighten can make our check books serve their needs—that the money represented by our checks, conse¬ i crated to the service of God and his! little ones all over this world, can be the golden medium through which his blessing shall be passed on to those whose lives are shadowed by sin and sorrow. Shall we not joyously bring our gifts? We Shall Give Them Their Chance A missionary tells a story of a lit- j ■ ■ tie girl who came to a Christian' j school in the Phillipines. So great | (the was her distress upon being told that af school was so full as not to i I ford a place for her that the mission- j I ary and his wife decided to take her into their own home and give her the opportunity to attend school, The missionary called the child to him and said to her: “Felicia, could you learn?” She looked at him with “all the soul of all the womanhood of all the world in her eyes” and said: “I could if I had a chance.” It is our privilege through the mis sionary society to give countless women and little children of our land and of these great outside lands their chance for happiness through the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. Shall we not do it? PAPER CLOTHES (The paper suit—made in Germany —has appeared in this country. The price is said to be $2.65.) Now, Hiram, hand that paper here, You’ve had it long enough, ’Twill make a dress for Sally dear, It is the very stuff. That comic page is all the rage With all the stylish wimmen; I seed a dress upon the stage What had it on for trimmin’. An’ thar’s the Seedartown Gazette. Don’t let it go sky-hootin’, 'Twill make a coat for you, I bet, Now just as sure as shootin’. The price of clothin’s cornin’ down— A whole year for a dollar— ’Twill be good when you good to town An’ wear that paper collar. But that Hearst paper, I don’t know Just how ’twould do for wearin’, You’d talk for Wilson, and right then Your shirt ’ul go to tearin’. An > jf y 0U f ussed and Watson cussed, Just like you do some places, The dog-gone thing ’ud tear an’ bust A}1> ‘ digappear in blazes. An’ there’s the Journal an’ some more Since Hoke Smith got defeated. just so dogged all-filed sore, They’d get you superheated. But that thar Dalton Citizen, We’ll let the family share it, We'll read he news and readers’ views An’ the whole dei n family weal it. (By James Wells, The Printer Poet, in Dalton Citizen.) -o— PRIMITIVE BAPTIST SF.RVICES THIS WEEK There will be Primitive Baptist services held at the church Friday night, Nov. 5th, 7:00 o’clock, and Sunday night, Nov. 7th, at 7.00 o’clock. Services conduct ed by Elder Woodard of Cordele. l' The circus came today according to schedule, but the crowd that came to see it was smaller than usual. NOVEMBER 4, 1920 TOUR OF INDUSTRIAL CENTERS TO BE MADE j IN BEHALF OF MOVEMENT FOR A GREATER GEORGIA TECH AND A GREATER INDUSTRIAL GEORGIA. - Atlanta., Ga., Oct. 30.—Invitations have been sent out to one hundred and fifty prominent Georgians to I make a week’s tour ~>f industrial , centers of the north and east on be ! half of the movement for a Greater Georgia Tech and a Greater Indus¬ trial 1 Georgia. the decided Plans for tour weie upon recently at a meting of indus trial leaders at the state capital in Atlanta, called by Governor- Dorsey, at which they enthusiastically in¬ dorsed Georgia Tech’s policy for strengthening the industrial sinews of the state and voted unanimously that the tour would be the first and biggest step in this direction that could be taken. Not only will the to a- be a tre¬ mendous impetus in forwarding the industrial development of Georgia, but it will give the stale su.-h adver¬ tising outside its borders as no state in the nation has yet received. The tour will be staged from No¬ vember 17 to November 23 inclusive, and the tentative itinerary includes the cities of Cincinnati, Pittsburg, Niagara Falls, Boston, New York and others lying in the industrial re¬ gions roundabout. The Special will be made up of a solid train of seven steel Pullmans, f diner ’ an observation car and a ba ^ a * e ca >'- Although it is expected that an overwhelming number of ap plications will be received from Georgians who wish to make the trip, attendance will have to be limited to one hundred and fifty.. Invitations to a selected list of the state’s indus¬ trial leaders will be sent in the near future, and all arrangements com pleted, together with the personnel of the party, well anev : of the date ’ of departure. Each man who makes the trip w 11 1 pay his own expenses. Though these will be nominal considering the itine vary planned, they will ill s servi to finance the entire ua-.ie ■i wiih out expense to the state or any or ganization. - The editor of The L jade .•-Tribune i s pleased to acknowledge an in viia tion from Governor Dorsey to join this expedition but regrets that ca¬ rious conditions prevent his acccpt , ing, one of which are the provisions *of the paragraph next abote