THE GRENADA SENTINEL
I:'..
O. F. LAWRENCE, Editor and PublUher
ELLETT LAWRENCE, Buetaeee Manager
,v * GRENADA, MISSISSIPPI
• r k
7
SUBSCRIPTION *1.50 PER'TEAR IN ADVANCE.
ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED UPON APPLICATION
Entered at the Post Office at Grenada, Miss., as
THE OFFICIAL ORQAN OF GRENADA COUNTY
V* . .
second class mail matter.
Next to the German spy, it the
man or business concern
robbed his neighbor in this war. He
should be shot.
Kid, you had best talk that girl in
to it before the soldiers get back.
Next to owning a fine saddle horse,
there arc a
the fancy of a girl more than a sol
dier's uniform.
who has
few things that appeal to
few bachelors in Grenada
who have been letting a powerful lot
of grass grow under their feet while
the "boys are away.
Got a
♦ »
member of the
Labor wants
delegation; the women want to
a
peace
be represented and of course
children will have to have a represen
• tativ*.« The delegation would be
begin with,
the
were
on it;
overlook the
—uiscounted to
" - there no member of the press
theit it will not do to
•.T-6h»atian ministO' and if the minis
the country school
Woodrow will tell
, try, why not
teachers.
Dut
US.
We
time.
Your Uncle
Boys it is taxpaying
mean in the county.
Sam will call later
Some people are saying that Wil
from which
in
The war is over now and it is un-j
necessary to accept the suggestion of I
every war board or every self-consti
son's pen, the message
carried to the public through the
greater agency for
was
newspaper, was a
ending the war than the sword.
McAdoo has now got the country
in a hullabaloo.
McAdoo is launching his boat
for the presidenial race according to
the rules.
tuted agency that come along in the
name of the war without question. .
- ■ j '
There is something in the Good!
Book about those who prophesied in
God's name and His judgements up
on them like the coming years will
. ontain of the records of those who
riaim to have wrought wonderful
things for "the boys," yet they did H
not hand in their names to the army C
board. It is needless to animadvert
upon what will be the fate of these
r 'safety first" heroes.
(
ho lil per lain states
so greatly what "the
to help win the)
realized
The
woiuen
are emphasizing
women have done
war" may not have
they arc gra
mothers and the grandmothers
it but
1
who!
rely reflecting upon the.
in j
i
Why, what the women have done in
Sunday j
in previous wars
bore buroens
which our country has been engaged. ;
this war
School job besides what the women in j
most of the previous wars have done, j
would not be understood as in j
at work;
is a picnic or a
And we
ing the gi
good women, God bless j
could be run
the least m arum
|
i
>y oui
them. Of course no wai
tone
j
)
without the women.
j
AND STILL ANOTHER DAY.
Cobb,'
Work,
of Mr. C. A.
By request
state director of Boy's Club
we are publishing a proclamation ot j
the Governor setting aside December;
istering boys
6, for the purpose of re
from 8 to 18 years "for the produc
The procla- j
at the in-i
tion of food and feed."
mation comes, no doubt,
stigation of some enthusiast who feels ;
that the burden of the world rests up
he is doing, j
work
special
on the
Teachers and others connected with)
schools are expected to get out and
hurrah the matter up and thus takej
another day that should be devoted to j
study and the digestion of what is
learned.
,
■
think
So many "days" makes us
of the man who was not satisfied
with his own footprints, so he under
took to slosh around in somebody
else's shoes. One of the ideas sug
gested is that "practically all s the
boys" can be lined up "in such a
manner that they will really do some
effective work." Bless your jsouls
there is already a large per ce^fi of
these boys doing "effective
work.
Too many fads and too many over
zealous specialists, who fear they
will be lost sight of unless we are
J »
^ having "days".
i Let's give the children a little while
for old time methods of study and de
velopment.
to
Of course if it be granted that the
without the necessary in
parents are
telligence to direct their children,
then the objection to a "day for this
for that and a whoop and
hurrah for all will not, as the lav
and one
yers say, lie.
ADVANTAGE OF NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING.
a
as
a
Most of the advertising copy for
the fourth Liberty loan campaign was
of course prepared in advance.
During the campaign the circum
stances under which the bonds must
be sold underwent a radical change.
We went into the campaign on the
theory that the war was going to last
indefinitely, and the copy,
papers and magazines, was writ
Then, after
some of the advertisements had been
came the German peace
It had a dampening effect up
the sale of bonds. It became
necessary to disabuse backward sub
scribers of the idea that the war was
practically over and the government's
need of money less urgent. This in
volved the preparation of new copy
—for the newspapers; not for the
magazines. For them what was writ
ten was written, and had to be print
both for
news
ten from that viewpoint.
printed
drive.
on
ed.
In one city alone, says the Phila
delphia Record, 160 newspaper ad
vertisements were "scrapped" and
new ones, up to date in their appeal
in every particular, were prepared to
take their place. The German peace
drive became a factor in the news
paper Liberty loan advertising. But
in all other advertising it had to be 1
ignored. '
The lesson in this should be obvious*
to every advertiser. The newspaper!
advertisement is a publicity weapon
instantly adaptable to every eonciev
■
i
j
:
I
a!)le changeof conditions confronting
the advertiser, and even to conditions^ s
Mnith he could not conceive in ad
' tincc * Publishers Auxiallary. |
5
The fact that no president of the *
United States ever left the country t
for loreign shores while in office is j
only a precedent, and Mr. Wilson '
does r.ot feel bound by precedents.
H * s true that there was never before
C uch a temptation, or the precedent
might have been broken sooner. It is
easy to believe that Colonel Roose
vc ^ would rot have
such a case as
Journal (Rep.)
respected it in!
this.—Kansas City
SUCH SCENES GIVES US PAUSE,
Have you. as a parent, ever stooped
over your little boy or girl as he or
she, hot with scorching fever, lay on
i sick bed. and been tortured as by
the fires ot hell itseli with the thought!
that something might develop that;
would take
;
these few
;hem over
If there
the denths
that dear one from you?
If «o you probably will appreciate
If not, then pass
i;
lines.
for you cannot understand,
is anything
that can stir!
...
oi a soul, can cause tne lj
s to quiver, can arouse j
is the si<*ht of one's child i
sick bed! delirious, tough-;
ing one minute as the fever mounts (
higher and lapsing into almost death- (
the next, then smiling
heart
emotion, i
tossing on a
■
j
like stillness
unnaturally as the little sufferer de
, , „
scribes to mother and father the un
picture that he sees in his iie-j
I
car
j
lirium.
Heartrending, yes.
As the suffer-:
with parched lips, breathes quick
nd laughs as he'or she voices the
er.
; •'
vis
isions of a temporary deranged lit
a sensation so
tie mind, you sense
• and unusual that there are no
j
( l ueel
words to describe it.
j
Honest now, you have gone through
such an experience, regardless ot how —^
hardened an old sinner you may be,
has it not turned your thoughts in
a
Has
, direction they seldom travel?
■ it not awakened in your seemingly
spiritual proof soul a deep longing
to have so lived that in such dark
.... . . f i
hours you were entitled to teel that
you had a right to lean upon the GoocL
Shepherd's staff? Has it not brought
to you with startling vividness the .
thought that In the hour when the ^
heart is wrung with apprehension and;
sorrow there is comfort and hope
, ' . „ u „ o
only from one scource? Has it not
made you realize your utter unworth
iness to pray? Has it not made you
feel, in fine, if you have not lived a
life wholly clean, spiritual, prayerful,
that you have misled some of the
l-eally great things and lastly has R
a
»
not brought to you a silent, compell
ing* MMe of^helpleaiuuMw/ of depend
ence, that has prompted ypu to de
termine that in the future your life
wo^ld fully spquare with religious
teachings?
As you look upon that little form,
bone of your bone, flesh of your flesh,
the fevered brow and; feel the
4
caress
twitching w hite hot hands and Angers,
if there exists in your soul one parti
cle of religious belief, it is bound
to suddenly bur3t from its latent
state and .sweep over you as a storm
wind toys with the giants of th<S for
est.—Hattiesburg American.
IF THE NEWSPAPERS
SHOULD SUSPEND.
The merchant who is content to
sell only his established trade is not ■
a successful merchant. He may sell
as many shirts, as many suits of un
derwear, as many blouses, as much
ribbon, piece goods, and other mer
chandise as he sold in any year in
the past, and his volume in dollars
and cents may be greater because of
higher prices, but no merchant is en
joying healthy growth unless he is
winning new trade all the time.
The folks who are supplying their
needs at a competitor's store are your
customers—if you can get them, but
you are not going to win them unless
you advertise yQur methods and your
merchandise to them in mediums
which they inrite into their homes
and for which they pay a price. The
most available medium for the retail
merchant is the weekly newspaper.
The newspapers of the country are
a vital necessity. If all newspapers
should suspend publication, it would
be a national calamity. You should
appreciate your newspaper and what
the publisher is doing for the com
munity, and how much he can help -
you, by advertising your store in his
columns consistently and continous - 1
1
'
ly
The cost of advertising by circu
lars, folders and booklets is 3c to 10c
per home. This material is received
■ as a piece of advertising which came
i uninvited and is treated accordingly,
j You can send your message to ten or
more homes for 30c by newspaper
:
I
advertising, and it is welcomed.
Your advertising
appropriation
volume of
s j 10U ] ( j | )e h ase( i G n your
In the larger cities of the
| coun txy retail advertisers spend 3 to
5 per cen t of their gross sales., Any
* ^ ide-awako merchant in a good loca
t j on tan a fford to invest at least 2%
j )er cent i0 advertise his business and
' oroaf ] e n his territory,
war j s over and competition
v/ qj a fr;ii n j, e keen. You will again
px- CS j Se d by salesmen to buy their
goods. You will be able to get every"*
thing you want, and more. You
should be willing to make a rcasona
in good
ble investment at this time
will advertising to build up the pres
tige and reputation of your estab
Hshment. We are enterin K a period
of good-will advertising such as the)
world has never known. Every!
merchant ahouM plan accordinrly—
Lexington Advertiser. .
HARDY LOCALS.
Mrs. Minnie T. Smith left Friday
for Memphis, where she will visit her
daughter. Miss Ethel Smith, who is
now book-keeper at Plough Chemical
^°:
Mrs. Maggie M. Davis spent Thurs -1
lj a y w j^ her daughter, Mi's. W. H
j McNeil.
i Mrs. Ethel Thomason took her lit- (
«« son : r»»"' i
where he will undergo an operation. (
( Mrs j,y K Coats and three
( boys are spending several days
Doctor Coats who is still stationed auj
' Mrs. F. B. Coats also!
trip to Grenada
' i
little
with
■
I
Atlanta, Ga.
made a busine
Thursday.
i
(
Mrs. McCune Talbert is visiting
I relatives in Hady this week.
Mr. Clinton and All Thomason were
Hardy visitors last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Geeslin were Grcr.a
d a visitors last Friday.
Hardy must have some attraction
people are still moving in.
Look out. we are coming to the front.
Brother Hargis was with us last j
Both sermons enjoyed and ;
service
so
as new
no
Sunday.
'TX'Xwd
—^ resent .
be,
was
Misss L ou i s Smith and her chum,
Miss Katherine Lupkin spent the
week end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. W. Smith.
Miss Fannie Staples was also en
a
tertained by Miss Louis Smith last
week.
Our School teacher, Mrs. Glen
Thomason requests each patron and
c jtizen of Hardy to help her place
same more desk in dchool as* Hardy
the . school ^rowding^^^ ^ ^
the ^ j an ^ S p en t a few hours with Mrs. T.
and; ^ Huteoji Tuesday. ''A
Messers Jpbt Ha* and Davi^l Web
ster of Winona visited Miss Gladys
not ^ Wednesday, who was the guest
^ an< j yfj jj Gully,
you Mrs. T. A. Hutson is visiting rela
a tives in Enid. -
visitors last week,
the j- m ^i ce i-tire, Sr., is on our sick
R list,
V
m
* * % Si
V THIS YKAft HA* ****** ■?
M -■*.
Wannamaker-Cleveland Cotton ,
THf ***T rOH THI* VICINITY '
•a the IIIO d###*d the erep. TH* NON*Y 5fl!aKirt W y#n*-**Ly i™#-* JU'wmnS
•TALKS. Wlththe M«h price ef cetteh aM the «•#•*•!* er •* eer s «
offers te plant Juat "any elS aee#.*.
Sell Your Old Seed «ud Make Mere
Money With Wnnnamaker-Clevelend
w#
Wf
Vi
UK
mM
KTwlip?
v
}V.
r
Secure Your
Planting
Seed Early
%
8 k'
:c.
v 1
w»n.in,-«M f «.'•» «.*V5S? SS^/"Srt3SrV5t
th* constant rain# d'.rlng th# Jattar
greatly limltad tlia aupP'r
THt a#ad whteh we have ;»n JT*!* "t*! "leeM LmdUUw*.
mlddit cr -p, and wtre picktd befora ,«*,• ami wt -
W# )<»v« on hand much !#•* nntnm t# harleg a*H #«t.
P-I!td to dooMn# many .rdwa th# iatterjjart of j !r j?r# •• t-t#!.
\V# posltlvt'y wl!l n#i a#ll a ay mor# t##« than th-*e# w» <*"*» __ w w.
Th* u:ttv#r#al MCcaat of VYaanama- JJ 1 eur *#••
k#r-«.:Uv#!a»id Cott#n during th* pa#t \«J t"**
a*ator< h## glrmly #atabU#h#d #ur *•
loetti at rain **f thf# gr#at variety a#
t'i* m#»t profltabl# far both hfl land*
and d«ha. Th# largvat r»t*nt*ra in th*
dolta a ai*( iofiH ar* dlac-arding thtfr low
long staple cot
h »ai K y -yiording Want»amak*r•• i'!#v«t#o4
a".;.' 1 i.» heap planting y-'ur
I.KSS THAN TWO »i S11KIJ4 OK Old* SKBO
1MTROVKD VARIETY.
3.
Our Seed Are
Deluded
TU# Kind Y#u Sh#uli
Riant
!«#t y##r. «>»• *f tfca
from tti# hiH ##t*i#n «* *«**
of <T«wi#r'a *i4g#. in *riKM« y^
other# »a go#4 *«##a*
rioli D#lta lao«iii of I>«o
T#ru###«# t» Tor##, f » «
Okloijoma
1
It tak*# 2.200 pound# of
ordinary #o«d to tnako m
ton of Oollntad *##d. Wo
uv» you 120 pound# of
lint and and 80 pound# of
dugt in* dirt which you
nay for wh«n you b'»y do
Ilntad
to buv dellnted
(1) thoy
_ te
.........._ uy-Umda a* d l#w-lMrtta ••
^bow th# aamo'#fdo*ididi.roauK.
'd a#ad wt:«n IT TAK®d
TO BI r t A •CHMHi or AS
for th*
m
Moreover,
<»
i
'•jintu#*
It
p
v«
b*e#<ia*:
B««
raqulra l#aa molatur# t#
a#rmln#t#; (2) th#y #r#
claanar—no trash; (3)thay
ar# #a#l#r planted; (*)
th#y r##ulra l#a# aaad to
th# acr#; (9) thay 8#rml
nat# mar# uniformly; (<»)
th#y ln#ur# a mora uni
form stand. »
Wannamaker-Cleveland 1* Surely a "Moner-Maker**
g is a d'atiwt variety, untlraly dif>r«nt from Hi# i»!d Ol#v#land Hi* 9afl aallN^
anil nni*l «<*i l>* confuard with it. Its stapt# I ta 1 ati4 1-ld innhaa. Tt># * ^* ^1
»f Hia Hni is *n<*'l and tha ylrlil ia from :»9 * v*r <•#*!. It a aafd.HijR kg
diarasa-raalatin#;. both In rAjard t« a«thra> «- ^ -t w'K; ul#sma ra*« a*d
•X'*aplionaliy w# 1 !. Wa ralaad it thla yasi *« « »<»ala ar*# it t*»
ooltnii ji*»r am# than any wlhar varlaty *»,•* m.«.;
It 5a stroncly ranoinn.-rdad ky na Nx|i«r>s
a#ant», win* ar# urstna .h# ;»1# In th#lr d^trt'rta t® plant It.
tr#
Writ# far Fra# Circular
and Rallatola T#atimonlal*
* *
Ntati®®a a®4 41ff®r#«t o®w
Wa will gladly mall a
dwribiti* this
oircular
(rant o#tton and lot yon
r«#d many taatimon-'aia
from p#opl# who gT#w our
cotton in 1911 at a big
profit.
Evary i#ed «ff»ra»t far aala by u# iiaa oa*n gr«w» t>a #ur ®Wi* *kl
tatian. at »e#tt. Mfa«. und#r tha par#«m«i au#*rvisiw> a< Fr»?###o> J. W
W# do not farm out an/ ##*d <*r hay from oth#r gr#wat« n*r t||
Aft#r #ur auppiy i# aaHati#t#d wa ar* out of M
Fox.
pUBpoaa at r#-;*a!a.
markat.
•UARAttTY BANK «WJ t
MlfATHhi, TWW.
MISSISSIPPI DELTA PLANTING COMPANY
(Larf#at C#tt#n Plantation In th# World.)
BUT TOUR BIRD ftoX TOUR LOCAL D1ALSR
soil you ohoaaar than if you wort t# ord#r dteoat from th# Plantation, aw In# t# th# hlflh fraiflht rat## •• I
than oar lata.
Ha c n
:d
W« hiiTB produced • o*r ot thia s»l*ot«d WapimaakT-QUyBUnd <dii*l > * f
from th« Mia^Mippi D*1U Plantirf Oo., of Scott,Miss., tho largaat Bottom aood gpn
world. In ordor to inVoduca it to thk oodiaunitj, thaj Koto anoWod oa to offor ddo
Tory ok>oo pvioa. SIB W AT OITC1.
a* *
FOB OALO OT
WINDHAM & MIERS, Grenada, Miss.
a
-
"Never Mind
How Strong
*—\You Are—
<
h>
1
I f'l
Gw?
n i
What D'ye
Todav it's a battle of wits—and brains win.
Muscle" and brawn don't count so much as they
used to. The creat question now is "What do l
you know? '* It draws the line between failure
and success, between a poor job and a eood one. ;
What do you know? Have you special ability? ■
Could you ■■inakecood , 'in ahwjobrichtnou . !
For 23 years the International Correspond
ence School# have been training men for better
work and bigger salaries. They can train i OL,
matter where you live, what hours you work,
or how little your education. Mark and mod
the ceupon and find ®af-it won't oMigate you
in the least.
no
. __ ■ - - __ TU* OUT Mt»t. ■ -■— •
international correspondence schools
Box 893, Scranton, Pa.
F KpLatofoPy «t<«*l jo*fCnuri»ln lhe»uki« 1 *frN*< Xl
P«i«lwl«« CS*lr*m«ii*hJr „Ul»»fr«nna ■
r]M«ch«i<U al l»r«liii»x t «mt*v
□civlM mr'OTCTioa
N'<'nu*r» , 'l»y
'V lvM Sfpviip w
tfafl {»®rrip- ifBliBH
ihhorii V* >PAMSH
i
rMm'RK >
rj.MM urn x 11 a;
^j*r*L*i>*T tm r»l l*r*.*i*r
,\at;re
r
Ad-Jret*.
^
I'mnk J. Cheney «atli t..«t h#
"'ln'.h. !
'
R'ini of ONK nrxnRW n<u»l. vti
a'.O i-'vrv r*r * , :«tar. , n
m'U !
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C\\TA!Utn
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cifrc.v:
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rr wk
r/o .•* 'id
lilts litll <1.*'
a. w. c;i
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Sicorn t.» L' - fOf..'
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f
FEEL noCKABLE
FROM THAT COLD?
.
Colds and coughs are quickly I
relieved by Dr. King's
New Discovery
Nobody should feci "perfectly mis- !
crable" from a cold, cough or bronchial
attack for very long. For it takes only
a little while to relieve : t and get back
on the road to recovery when Dr. .
King's New Discovery is faithfully I
used. It soon loosens the phlegm, re
lieves irritation, soothes the parched,
sore throat, brings comfort.
Half a century old and more popular
today than ever. At all druggists.
I i
Make Your Bowels Behave j
Make them function with gratifying j
precision. If regulation of^ the diet
does not relieve their torpidity Dr.
King's New Life Pills will. They are j
perfect bowel trainers, cleanse the
system surely, comfortably.
j
;
.
K1MCAID PICK-UPS.
Mr. S. E. Gillon was a recent visi
tor to the delta being the guest of
his brother, Mr. Hugh Gillon.
Mr. Quinn McCormack was a visi
tor in the home of Mr. J. W. Brown
last Sunday.
Miss Elmer Moore who is teaching
in Scobry spent the week-end with
her mother, Mrs. A. J. Moore.
Mr. J. H. James had fifty-five visi
tors in his home last Sunday, Water
Valley and Grenada were represented
besides the surrounding country.
Mr. and Mrs. Blanton Orothurs of
\
X m
A
\
vri# — _
r ( ftem I 7 |*|Y fYl ^AllT
■ | IK 1 * T1 § W 1 I11.1.1.V/KJLL
w
. •
m ^ A.
>1 T1X W I | 11
Clll LO ^ JL JL JL
- *
So hereafter all three brands
of WRIGLEY'S will be wrapped
in pink paper and hermetically
sealed in wax.
Look for WRIGUYS in the
pink-end package and take
choice of the same
your
three popular flavors.
1 S«
Be sure to
get
WRIGLEY5
m
i! d
m
'.I ,7
mm
U$il
for quality
and because
* \ s \ * * v I'm
c
_
r v.
\
The
Flavor Lasts!
V-'j
Bakers
& Fancy Grocers
'PHONE 5f
Jas. Cuff Son
Water Valley spent the day last Sun
day in the home of Mr. J. W. James.
Miss Glenn Parker and Mr.-J. C.
James spent last Sunday in Big Creek.
Mr. Clyde Childs and Miss Madge
Childs were in Grenada last Monday
on business.
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. James, Miss
Iler Rodgers and Mr. C. M. McElroy,
/
all of Grenada spent Sunday after
noon visiting friends in the eastern
part of the county.
99
BOB.
it
Ife
.* -1
Gtbvb'b chill T*ifc
M tMbtod Sy f h« WfcftWa KtwpiUc.