Newspaper Page Text
^fSaJSa jail
,«J Su»J*r ” ho L . (t With
rsrs-App—
, Nixon cl,orl f d of *yr. Bob’
"[ % “Zd o.-cape from
ia.< ** Thuni ;
. . ua „ aciompanled
h ' Tith' another negro
'vith^^' bunrloriZlng St0r °
‘i M Hutchings*
«po« W* »* at
f* Jail « nd .«“ r, y ^
.. arrt , rt them imr.iedmte-
* V | " However, Nixon
L-ted Sunday morning.
... believing that soon-
would aPProf ■“ 0,6
, j,; ; iother, made arrange-
"' 'the plaeed watched.
T-iintt he appeared there
**'. . ...aUa-t. The watcher
Sheriff ,and he with
,, and does from the
w a soon at t^ G scene
}.'m'filtered the woods, after
fa house. The dogs were
in -ho trail, and in a short
had Nixon in
fK ain. and beta in jail attain,
cunt here from Alabama,
the dam at Furman Shoals
ago, has not yet been
THE U NI ON. RECORDER, MILUOCaVUU. CA, MARCH'!,. mi
HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW?
apartment for rent
J„d, three room low.r ip
t, keep tl“ ?*'<• »» * M 0 ° P"
prefer coapU withmel chil-
1. Nome one of Vamea Fenitnorc
Cooper’s novels.
2. What is Sm Salvador?
3. What three disciples were with
Christ at the Transfiguration?
4. What are the chief divisions of
the brain.
5. What three colleges were in the
colonies?
6. About how long hnn the present
business deprea'icn lasted?
7. Of what region is the grapefruit
a native?
3. How Ion gwas the duration of the
textile worker’s strike in Vir
ginia?
9. When did Alexander G. Bell use
the telephone for the first time?
10. Who is leading a campaign of
ci'. . disobedience in India?
11. How long has Andrew W. Mellon
served as secretary of the treas
ury?
12. What are the primary colors?
Amwen
I. “The Lost of the Mohicans.”
An island of the West Indies.
Peter, James and John.
4. Cerebrum, cerebellum, medulla
oblongata.
5. Harvard, William & Mary, Yale.
0. A Lout a year.
7. East Indies.
8. Since last September.
9. March 10, 1876.
10. Mahatma Gandhi.
II. Ten continuous years.
12. Red, orange, yellow, green blut,
indigo and violet.
NEPHEW OF MLLEDGEVnXE
WOMAN WHITES NEW NOVEL
Horace Wad*. Napkaw of MU* Wad.
and Mra. SImvm, Has Naw Book
Froai Tk« Pres*
Thi» should certainly interest yi
If you aro in tho market for a real
honest to gooduosa buy, wo bar# the
best and gmatast line we bar* erar
offered on the ride as you pay plan.
L. N. JORDAN
Horace Wade, a nephew of Miss
Rosalie Wade and Mrs. C. C. Shouse,
of Milledgeville, has a new novel off
the press. It is published by The
Hia 1 Press, Inc., 152 W. 13th Street,
New York City, and is titled ‘‘TO
HELL WITH HOLLYWOOD.” Many
Milledgeville people will recall the
icnsation that attended the publica-
.ion of Horace Wade’s first novel—
"In the Shadow of Great Peril’
written at the age of 11 years. Over
night the juvenile author became
famous. The book revealed
lost uncanny literary technique,
inning the praise of literary
notables such as Sir Hall Caine,
George Bernard Shaw, Rex Beach,
S. Cobb, Mary Roberts Rine
hart and Sir Gilbert Parker. Since
this time young Mr. Wade has been
ungaecd in newspaper, magazine,
scenario and publicity work. He was
fenture writer on .he Heard news
paper from his 12 to 17tn year,
his articles being syndicated and
reaching milFons of readers. He en
joys the distinction of having inter-
more celebrities than any
Americun past or present, including
four United States presidents. Prince
of Wales, Lord Birkenhead, John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., Thos. A. Edison,
etc. etc.
At the astonishing age of 22,
Horace Waun, in his new novel TO
HELL WITH HOLLYWOOD fulfills
the expectations of his brilliant boy
hood and adolescent years. For
some five years he was studying
Hollywood from an angle that gives
him a keen insight into the lives of
the actors and actresses of the silver
screen He is a member of the Thal
ia n Club, compriring many of the
younger movie set, has been on tho
Scenario Stgfff of Metro-Goldwyu-
Mayer studio and tha. of R K. O., and
personally knows and has been
photographed with several hundred
ot the outstanding stars and lead
ing men and women of the Cinema
world. His book TO HELL WITH
HOLLYWOOD is a vigorous and un
sparing “expo.-e" of sinister condi
tions obtaining in the studios. No
other writer on Hollywood has had
the courage to use the scalpel in the
way Mr. Wade has in his novcL The
story in intriguing and gripping,
thoroughly human and delightfully
frank. It will cause America
gasp and wonder why there i
supine tolerance of conditions that
almost mnke Babylon’s nefarious
reputation u lavender-scented affair
in comparison.
That the novel will arouse notional
interest is a foregone conclusion,
and however tho reader may be
hocked by its frank insight into the
‘sexy complex” of Hollywood, he or
<he will applaud the ohvious pur
pose of Mr. Wade in attempting
through this channel to awaken the
national consciousness to conditions
that should be remedied if tho
motion picture industry is to sur-
March 18—Cleveland born, 1837.
March 19—William J. Bryan born,
1860; British Steamship Bernice
left port and was never heard from
1879.
March 20—Woman suffrage granted
in China, 1912; Bandits in the
Sierras kidnapped J. E. Barstow,
an American, 1930.
March 21—Pere Marquette st Starv
ed Rock, 1675; Battle of Goldsbor-
ough ,N. C., 1865; Germany begins
Kai.-er’s bat.le, 1918.
March 22—American bombardment
of Vera Cru*, Mexico. 1847; Elia
sian capture Prxenjral, 1915;
Stamp Act enacted by Parliament,
1765.
HOW ONE WOMAN
LOST 20 LOS. OF FAT
THIS WEEK IN HISTORY
March 16—Madison born, 1751; at
tack of the Little Belt on the Presi
dent, 1811; U.'S. Military Academy
established at West Point, 1802.
March 17—British evacuate Boston,
1776 Red Republicans insurrec
tion break out in Paris, 1871;
Steamer Utopia, sunk by collision
off Gibraltar, 594 lost, 1891.
SIDE AND BACK
l*£jr Had Suffered So Modi
Pur Wu Alnost Desperate.
Sajri Cardni Helped Her.
everything, for my health was
wretched." writes Mis. Nannie Davis,
of 418 W. Woodard Street, this city.
•T was In bed most of the time,’*
explains Mrs. Davis, “suffering so
much with pain in my side and 1
back, and weakness. I was so dis
couraged, I was almost desperate.
“I knew there ought to be some
thing to reach my case. I only
weighed about 110 pounds. My eyes
were hollow and I looked awfully
bad.
“A good friend told mo about Car
tful. After taking my first bottle, .
I felt :bettcr, but I kept It up until
I had.taken four bottles, and now I
am well, have no pain in my sldo
or back, and feel like a new woman.
Ifcan work most of tho time, and
feel fine.
“For three years, I have been freo
from pain. That Is why I recom
mend CarduL”
If you aro run-down, nervous, or
•suffer every month, take Card ill, a
used by women for over
fifty years. As your health im
proves, you will shore the enthusl-
r«i»iiW tht>»»arui« of others who have
praised Cartful for the benefits-they
have-felt after taking It. ***•
Loit Her DoaUe Chi*
Lost Her PronutieBt Hips
Lost Her Shgfishness
If you’re fat—first remove the
cause!
Take one hulf teaspnonful of KRU-
SCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot
water before breakfast -every morn-
g—cut ot’t pastry and fatty meats
go light on potatoes, butter, cteom
and sugar—in 3 weeks get on the
scales and note how many pounds of
fat have vanished.
Notice also that you have gained
in energy—ycur skin is clearer—
your eyes sparkle with glorious
health—you feel younger in body—
keener in mind. KRUSCHEN Will
give any fat person a joyous sur
prise.
Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN
SALTS at Hayes Pharmacy and
Harris Hall’s Drug Store. If even
this first bottle doesn’t convince you
this is the easiest, safest and surest
way to lose fat—if you don’t feel a
superb improvement in health—so
gloriously energetic — vigorously
alive—your money gladly returned.
Mrs. Marne Carey of Buffalo, N.
Y., writes—“Since I began taking
Kruschen Salts I have lost 20 pounds
and I feel as if I had lost 50 pounds
I feel so good and the best part of
it all is that I eat anything I like.”
(Advertisement)
More than
7.1,000 miles in
a New Ford
BELL'S
THE substantial worth of the new Ford b reflected 111
iu good performance, economy and reliability. It*
stamina and endurance are particularly apparent in
•ections where bad roads and severe weather put a heavy
extra burden on the automobile.
In less than a year a new Ford Tudor Sedan waa
driven more than seventy-three thousand miles over a
iHfirul! route. The operating cost per mile was very low
aadf radically the only expense for repairs was for new
piston rings and e new bearing for the generator.
The car carried an average load of 1200 pounds of
atii ami was driven 230 miles daily. “The Ford has
®ncr failed to go when 1 was ready,” writes one of the
Ihfec mail carriers operating the car. “The starter did
the trick last winter even at 34 degrees below zero. Tho
f 3 -*’ runs about 20 miles per gallon. At times I pull a
Irailtr whenever I have a bulky load.”
Many other Ford owners report the same satisfactory
performance. Every part lias been made to endure — to
6<tvi* you faithfully and well for many thousands ot
miles.
low rilCII *P Mli C A * I
$430 to $630
rK *TUMBa mr mi new womb
4(lrarft- ,.
“•rdv r t,nei color*, rldk, long-mearing upholstery,
i^/ - •led body construction, Triplex shatter-proof glass scind-
fully enclosed four-wheel broken, four Homdaittm
^ ,,n R hydraulic shock absorbers, aluminum pinion*, chrome
ralrm, torque-tube drier, three-quarter /tooling rear
in i ft'"' 1 ' ,ltnn twenty ball and roller bearingn, and bright, endur-
♦o, J 1 " Steel for many exterior metal part*. In addition,
Iob *** n ' an : dollar$ because of the low first cost of the Ford,
* °/ operation and up-kcep and low yearly depreciation.
Hundreds of New Dresses
Just Coming in by Every
Express For Easter
‘Hundreds of new Dresses just coming in by
every express, for Easter. The styles are en
tirely new in solid colors and in prints—Special
for this week—
$16.75 and $25
Such values you have never seen. They look
like ( 1.00 and $39.00 Dresses.
NEW EASTER COATS
SPORT COATS IN LIGHT COLOR
$19 values at $15
Black and Blue Coats and Lapin, Fur-trimmed,
light weight—Speially priced—
$25.00
LADIES’SUITS
Are very stylish this season, black and blues
and tweed effect, two and three piece—Special
at—
$15.00
If You Want the Best Shop At
E. BELL’