The leader-enterprise. (Fitzgerald, Ga.) 1912-1915, July 16, 1915, Friday Edition, Image 1
Friday Edition Official Organ Ben Hill County, Ho--Here we are, the standing of the Auto Club membersshows some increase. The Auto Club is rolling along bicely, and the time is not far away now when some one will be the owner of a new 1916 Maxwell touring car. Luck nor chance play no part in the Auto Club, all that is necessary to win is just a little determination, vim, “pep” and plenty of self-confidence in your abilities to secure subscriptions, Read over the new special vote offer which is positivelv the last weekly clubbing offer that will be made at any | time between now and the close-=-and then act. Notice Until further notice no candi date will be allowed to poll more than 15,000 subscription votes above the leader of the previous issue. For example it the leader of todays paper has 100,000 no one will be allowed to poll more than 15,000 votes above her. District No. L. This includes all of the city of Fitzgerald and Fitzgerald Rural Routes. At least two prizes will be awarded in this district after the Grand prizes are awarded. Mrs. Teddie Meyers_ ______69,2oo Mrs. Willis Cole_________l6B,7oo Miss Pearle Blount________6o,2oo Miss Madlen Davenport___9o,2oo Miss Anna Huling________6o,6oo Miss Allie Mayes_________7o,2oo Miss Ruby Hunter________79,l2s Miss Melba Dozier________B6,6oo Miss Ruth Stephens______l46,6oo Mrs. C. A. Gina__________96,7oo Miss Grace Dickinson_____Bs,9oo Miss Lucille Whitley______B2,6oo Miss Margaret Spiller____l66,6oo Miss Jermina Hogan______6o,6oo Miss Pearl George________66,9oo Miss Willie Barentine_____Bs,6oo District No. 11. This includes all territory out side of Fitzgerald. At least two prizes will be awarded in this dis trizt after the Grand prizes are awarded, Mystic. Miss Bertha Jones________B4,6oo Miss Maud Crawford______B9,ooo Mr. Leo Bussill___________6o,loo Miss Annie Lau Spier_____so,3oo Miss Bessie McCook_______B6,2oo Miss Alice Fletcher_______loo,7so Miss Mae Lupo___________46,6oo Miss Mazie Floyde________4o,2oo Mrs. Juanita Sims___ ____69,950 Ocilla. Miss Alynne Howell..______66,9oo Miss Edna Tucker..______.92,6oo Miss Mildred Griner_.__.._Bl,3oo tate Seal Spoons Free! Every $2 worth of cash purchases entitles you to one of these elegant spoons---until Aug. Ist i i gobstnnn oid : E AMRARo 1o i el RANACRY ULO % W T U % $ mfi:fi;:fl At The SRR . O 171 & i! sonc MILIINETY I-Z off--dIK duits and Dresses 1-Z off-- | Store! U | l: Charming hats for the Summer Season at a mere fraction of actual worth--Silk Suits and Dresses in snappy Summer Styles--also a pretty, seasonable line ‘ of Linen Suits at 1-4 off--in fact the 2nd floor dept. is teeming with good things for thrifty, prudent buyers. The savings are unusual-exceedingly interesting i . ¢ : e » w i = ot - - o - -t !! Kimonas 1-4 ofi-Childrens Dresses 1-4 off--Special table Waists 1-4 off-Skirtsl-4,1-2 off | IN THE DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT the new white goods and thin colored fabrics are especially attractive just now--In the white end of it there are lovely : | striped and plain Voiles and Organdy at 25, 35 & 50c, 36 to 44 inch widths and in colors the special tables at 10, 15, 19 and 25c¢-- ' “‘One Price To Everybody” EM Pl RE M ER‘ AN l ILE q O Wm, R. BOWEN, President. | | General Phone 18-Grocery 165 , ®). A. MURPHY, Manager. ]' Ladies Oxfords and Pumps Reduced--In White, Tan and Fancy Styles 1-3 off-Mens and Childrens Low Cuts 10% off THE LEADER ENTERPRISE Miss Xrin Dill._.______. . 60,150 Miss Gladys Vickers_______s9,9oo Miss Iris Dickson_________7l,2oo 5 Rochelle. Miss Francis Brown_____._39,9oo Miss Mag Witton._________4o,2oo Miss Artie Gorden__/______96,6oo Miss Lorina Wells_________B4,3oo Miss Carrie Doster__. _____99,7oo Miss Kathleen Rivier______66,62s Miss Geneive Fenn________49,9so Miss Alberta Rickey_ _____69,925 Miss MattieClaudeGroutham74,6oo Osierfield Miss Blondine Wilbanks__lol,6oo . Douglas. Miss Hester Brewer_______24,6oo Miss Eunice Lott________loo,7oo Miss Maude Lee Bryan____66,9oo Broxton Miss Ruby Meeks_________69,6oo Abbeville Miss Louise Oliver________B6,3oo Miss Eunice Smith___ ----40,200 Miss Susie Carnes_________so,loo Miss Hattie Grace Carswell 79,900 Miss Willie Wilkinson_____29,92s Mrs. C. C. Fulghum______66,6oo Mrs. N. M. Patten________6s,9oo Miss Gladys Nunnaway____76,2oo Irwinville Miss Bennie Lawrence_____4o,2oo Miss Mattie Fussell__ --1-.66,600 Miss Lillian buke..._____lo9,7so Was It Suicide? Doc Johnson, the Engineer on the vassenger train of the A. B. &A. who had the misfortune to run over a white man in the car shed of the Terminal station in Atlanta Wednesday morning re lated the accident this morning and states that the man was so close to engine when he made his fatal step, that he could have touched the cow catcher with his hands. The man seemed to be in a dazed condition of mind or else delibe rately planned tbe rash act that ended his life. Numbers of peo ple witnessed the accident and all agree that it could not have been avoided by the train crew. Mr. Johnson was grieved over the ac cident and though his train was running at less than five miles per hour, and stopped almost on the second, the man was cut in two at the instant. A Money on Farm Lands Terms: 5 to 10 years ~and conditions to sut borrower, | Improved farm lands s only.- 31 L e W | , : ' CLAYTON JAY FITZGERALD, BEN HILI, COUNTY, GEORGIA, ]ULi;IG. 1915, SHOE STYLES FOR LADIES. We notice Shoe Manufacturer’s Associations and Retail and Wholesale Dealers in Shoes have decreed that shoes for the coming season shall be of black leather with black cloth tops, very plain, no perforations, no omaments, no vanities, This is a sane decree, The real, substantial people like real, substantial, plain things. | The officers and directors of this bank are just as plain as plain shoes,--no vanities about them,--but They are among the heaviest tax-payers in the State of Georgia and financially strong far above: the average, They have made great success in their business affairs and The Exchange National Bank is the pride of all their business affairs. They have made it the First Honor Roll Bank of this section of the state It is of broad usefulness to this section of the couniry. It has the largest deposits found in this section of Georgia. It invites new accounts, ' The Exchange National Bank. THE HONOR ROLL BANK. The Treasurer of The Unired States Deposits Government Moneys Here. Second Voting Period Candidates Better Hustle if They Want the Most Votes Third and Last Period Goes in Force Aug. Sth, [Ten Per Cent Decrease in Schedule Below on that Date Second Period Schedule : W 6,750 R 18,000 BBy 27,000 4 Years______-_______....__________________ 45,000 BN .l e i e 67,500 NN - e b sedensae dPLDOO The second voting period is now in force and candidates who are really going to get anything out of the Auto Club will want to get busy during this period of the campaign. NOW—is the time for you to get in your best licks—while the campaign is young. START NOW TO PILING UP YOUR VOTES. AT THE GRAND Otto Barron and the black-face Comedian ‘‘Happy Jack’’, who played at the Grand last night made a “"HlT’’ with those pres ent. Owing to the rain last evening the crowd was very small. Tonight, Barron and ‘“‘Happy Jack’” will give a real Ragtime Musical Comedy act. Lemons 10c¢ per dozen cash -At Dodd Supply Company. Subscribe for the Leader-Enter prise. THRICE-A-WEEK Sunrise Breakfast, l Mr. Lon Sheahan gave a de-‘ lightful Sunrise Breakfast com plimentery to Miss Lucile Pea cock, of Marlin, Texas, at Lake Beatrice on Thursday morning. The party motored out to the Lake about 4:30, where they enjoyed a swim before cook ing breakfast. Five couples were invited. Real Estate for Auto Wanted to exchange real estate \for Ford Auto. See 1t Bryant’s Lumber Yard, CONFEDERATE RE-UNION AUG. 17-18; VETERANS 10 BE GUESTS OF CITY Committees fig%‘ihll’tl:(ril nircll(.i ‘Entertainf A called meeting of citizens' met in the office of Mayor Drewl W. Paulk Thursday morning to take organized steps to properly{ receive and entertain the veter-! ans which are to meet in Fitzger ald August 17-18. Mayor Drew W. Paulk was elected chairman and I. Gelders Sec. for the organ ization. Recognizing the merits of the occasion a resolution was adopted to entertain the veterans who wore the gray free by the citizens and to throw the homes in the city open to the visitors for the two days of the re-union. Elaborate entertainment features are planned for the old soldiers, in which the members of the Grand Army of the Republic, the Blue and Gray and the auxiliary women organizations of the city will join to make it a memoriable occasion. Fitzgerald will do its best to make this fiftieth anni versary of the c'ose of the war a love feast of peace and restored harmony and good will between the sections and no place in the South is go well fitted to demon strate that fact as our city, the home of so many of the veterans who wore the blue. The organi zation was perfected in the ap pointment of the following com mittees, who are already engag ed in the necessary steps to make the re-union a glorious success: Finance Committee—L. O. Tis del, E. K. Farmer, and J. E. Turner. R ) Committee on Homes:—H. A, Adams, R. I, Maffett, Z. V. Bar den, Mesdames A. H. Thurmond, J. E. Turner and J. M. Mosher. Badges and Decorations—Clay ton Jay, J. L. McCarty, A. H. Denmark. : e Entertainment and Program— L. L. Griner, A. B. Cook, Will Haile, A. H. Thurmond, P. Kop lin, J. C. Glover, T. J. Dickey, Misses Elizabeth Pryor, Esther Benton, Jeffie Persons and Mes dames W. T. Paulk, J. M. Me- Donald, Drew W. Paulk, C. A. 'Holtzendorf, T. M. Griffin. - Reception Committee—Wm. R. Bowen, Marcus Luke, J. M. Mosher, J. A. Jones, M. W. Gar butt, S. G. Pryor, Jr., Mesdames Harold Beall, S. G. Pryor, R. M. Mann, D. W. M. Whitley, J. M. Lee, R. E. Lee and Misses Nelle Frazer and Mary Lobingier. Official headquarters have been established by Gen. Preston at the Lee Grant Hotel, where rooms for himself and his staff have been secured by him. A complete program is being Mondav Wednesday Friday VOL. XX, NO. 84 arranged by the Secretary which will appear in the next issue of the Leader-Enterprise and the Press. : Eastman Host - ‘ To Editors 'Mcßae Furnished Barbecue ] s Eastman, Ga., July 13—From & o’clock this morning until noon members of the Georgia Weekly Press Association transacted gen eral business, It was the second day of their annual session. The place for holding the next conven tion probably will not be chosen until tomorrow’s session at the court house, At Monday night’s meeting 8 ‘handsome cut glass punch bowl ;was presented to Hon. C. M. iMethviu of the Eastman Times iJournul by the members of the association. “Billy” Sutlive of ’the Savannah Press presented the bowl to Mr. Methvin by request of President McCluchen, Will P. Upshaw of the Golden Age, Atlanta, delivered the re sponse in behalf ot the body to the welcome address made by Mrs, T. H. Edwards for the various clubs of the city, Editor Miller of the Jonesboro Herald delivered the response in behalf of the asso ciation to the welcome addresses on behalf of the city of Eastman and local organizations. : At 12 o’clock today the editors of Georgia, members of their families and a great crowd of East~ mantes left for Mcßae, 20 miles south of Eastman, where they were entertained at a typical Soath Georgia barbecue prepared by the people of Mcßae and Helena. From:. there they went to Jaybird Springs: where they enjoyed the bathing. . They returned to Eastman late -1 this afternoon. To-night they were emtertained at the home of Mrs. M. H. Ed wards, who gave the most elabo~ rate reception every held in South Georgia on any occasion. The: Georgia editors are enjoyiny tire stay here to the fullest extent, Eastman has turned the town over to the editors. Money to Loan On 5 and 10 acre tracts: , No Commissiens.. - Elkins & Koplin