The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, February 03, 1916, Image 11

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%m CAINS 30 ONj BOTTLES lares He Now EatsBet- | Sleeps Better and Us Better in Every L- Since Taking Tan- , vb ody in Columbia Tenn., ' p ic. McGavockk, who and'operates a large dairy 'ess in that city, there ever was a beliver \n S aid K. M. Smiser, the known Columbia Tenn., •ist, “It is Mr. McGavockk, talks about it all the time, as a right to talk, as medi- ever helped any jone as ,asTanlac has helped him. ealydoes not look like the time.” Here is Mr. Gav- statement: a ve now taken five bottles nlac and have gained thirty is. If you don’t believe it, here I am, come and look he, I don’t know what alible was, but I was all run and was unfit for work. I though it must have been tomach, as I had no appetite lot’ning seemed to agree with was also nervous and could eep good. I just kept going hill aud loosing weight along and nothing did me ;ood. until Smiser, the drug- told me about Tanlac. ied it on his recomendation helped me from the first oses. The medicine seemed hold right at once, and I to eat better, sleep better [eel better right from the If anyboyy wants to know 1 think of Tanlac, just tell to come and see me. I am here in Columbia. Tanlac imply made a new man of md expect to tell all my is about what it has done case.” nlac is without question the eatest medicine of its kind e American market today. extreme popularity of ic can only be accounted y the extraordnary meret of ledicine. The system besides purified, is toned up and orated, as the preparation _ from cleansing the blood * izes the constitution, over- l as it quickly seems to •vousn.ss, indigestion, non Illation of the lood. head dizziness and other trou- hat are so common, nlac is sold in Bainbridg, sively by Willis Drug Co., Donalsonville by the * Drug Company. adv. Miss Yarrington Furnishes Post-Search Light With List of New Books Ad ded to Large Collection. er Salivated by ilomel? Horrible! mel is quicksilver and ac ts like dynamite °n your liver iomel loses you'a day! You i w hat calomel is. It’s mer- „J )u ' c ksil ver . Calomel is ous. it crashes into sour 1 e dynamite, cramping and " ing vou, Calomel attacks " es and should never be lnt0 your system. • en you feel bilicus, sluggish ■Pated and all knocked out >e\e you need a dose of 'foils calomel just remember i druggist sells for 50 a 'arge bottle of Dodson’s which is entirely . ie anl plesant to take je| ? er ^ ect substitute for • t i» gauranteed to start s,df W ‘ thout stirring you • and can not salivate. Dane calomel! « the a ky.s work , Dodson’s ou feel StraiglUen8 you UP hiidS ££*■ Give il har-, b ''' aUSe U 19 per ' narm.ess and not Miss Yarrington, librarian in charge of the city library has furnished the Post-Search Light with a list of the new books re ceived at the library during the past month. Among the list will be found many books of interest, Bainbridge has a well estab lished library that is popular with the people and time to time new books are added so as to keep the best and latest books on the shelves. The following books have been added: “The Gray Dawn” by S. E. White. ‘‘The Golden Slipper”, by A. K. Green. Up the Road With Sallie, by L. R. Sterrett. “Thirty” by H. V. O'Brien. “The Heart of the Sunset”, by Rex Reach. “Way of These Women” by Oppenheim. “Money Master” by Gilbert Parker. “The Single Code Girl,” by B. E. Palmer. “Burkeses Amy” by Lippman. “The Treelands.” by John Gal sworthy. “His Royal Happiness,” by Mrs. Everard Cotes. SWIFT’S V'i/'jf* HIGH GRADE _ RED STEER BRAND FERTILIZERS THE CALAMITY HOWLER told the farmer, last year, to use less fertilizer. The farmer listened. He used 40 per cent less fertilizer in 1915 than he did in 1914. The result was a decrease of 32 per cent in the Southeastern cotton crop, due largely to a lack of fertilizer. v ; Don't listen to the Calamity Howler again. Large profits are ahead for the farmer who fertilizes liberally this year. Make the most out of high priced 1916 cotton and seed. , • iJ^ ser j Swift's Animal Ammoniated Fertilizer* will tell you that the Swift Brand* give larger yields and greater net profits than other brands—from 20 to 100 pounds more lint cotton per acre, which means at 12c cotton price, with the average usage of 400 pounds of fertilizer per acre, from ?12 to $60 per ton extra value in Swift's Fertilizers. . FROM SWIFT YOU GET WHAT YOU BUY AND MORE. FULL ANAL' YSIS FROM HIGH GRADE MATERIALS ONLY. We will supply reasonable percentages of Potash. Buy SWIFT'S FERTILIZERS and buy them early this year. SWIFT & COMPANY FERTILIZER WORKS, ATLANTA, GEORGIA./ represented by/ - R. H. MAY, BAINBRIDGE, GA. This Army is a’ready Equipped Service, But Many More Are Needed for THE GOOD WORD The good word that you hand your fellow man doe3 more good and costs less than anything we have on record. In the past two weeks we have been getting some very nice letters from our ; subscribers over the county, com- Draughton’s Practical Busi ness Colleges, located in Mont gomery and fifty other “live wire” cities, have over 200,000, ex-students h o 1 d i n g positions i Pkmentary to the paper and as throughout the United States— j we as occasional grouch. The an army that does not fight pouches being so few that they with guns and bayonets, but I been a rar ’^ y ' While the whose weapon is superior busi- i k ' nt ^ letters have been so many ness training — the kind that ^ at; can 1 we resist, the every-day! temptation to return thanks in this manner to those who have gone to the trouble to write us wins the battle commercial life. The aggregate annual income ^ , of this army-the graduates th ° se leUers a ? denclo l se8Ubstan ' of Draughon’s great chain of jtial testimonials in the way of Colleges at an estimated average j subscripfion money. We have salary at $75 a month $180,000 , s f the mark on this paper and if work, energy and push will Many recruits are needed; this \ give , , Decatur . C0U u nt > the best 000, winter the demand for office help going to be far greater than the supply, and both young men and woman may enlist with the certainly of a position as lieu tenant at a good salary, with every opportunity for promotion to captain. School is in session day and night. For catalogue giving full in formation address; H. R. Toole Supt., Draughon’s Business Col lege, Atlanta, Ga. weekly paper in the state we are going to give it to her. The kind letters we have been receiving have made us more determined than we have ever been, FOR SALE—I offer my Upright Grand Piano for sale. This instrument is perfect condition. Handsome Mahogany case, ar.d I offer it at an interesting figure for cash. Mrs. C. C. Norris. Care Hotel Bon Air. It makes next day; it loses Gut Your Store Down One Half Tens of thousands of farmers as well as town and city folks cut down their store hills one-half last year and saved money in spite of generally short crops and re duced wages. Absolutely millions of dollars were saved and countless families lived better than ever before in the face of the cotton crisis and general business depression. How were these burdensome store bills cut down? By the real money-saving power of good home gardens, rightly planted and kept planted and tended through the season. Hastings 1918 Seed Catalogue tells how to cut store bills down; tells about gar den and farm seeds of kinds and a qual ity that cannot be bought from your mer chant or druggist. It’s full of garden and James Cook | In Decatur Superior Court. vs | NovemherTerm 1915 I Itule Nisi to Kore- Wrn. K. Harris | closed Mortgage. It being represented to the Court by the petition of James Cook, that by deed of mortgage dated the 5th day of October 1905, W. E. Harris conveyed to the said James Cook, forty-one and two-thirds acres olf of lot of land No. 304 in the 15th land district of said County, bounded on the Kast by 83 1-3 acres of same lot owned by H J. Bru ton, on the North by lot No. 305, on the South by lot 303, on the West by i remnant of said lot No. 304, said land running across lot No. 304 North and [ 1 South, for the purpose of securing the 1 ; payment of said mortgage note. It is ! ordered, that the said defendant do pay into this Court by the first day of the next term the principal interest and costs due on said mortgage note or show cause if any he has to the contra ry, or that in default thereof foreclosure be granted to tfce said |>etitioner of said mortgage, and the equity of re demption of the said defendant therein be forever barred, and that service of this rule be perfected on the said de fendant according to law. This Nov- The Bainbrldge Ice Co. Announces as Follows: It IS per- —* 7 pmher 10th 1915 and does not farm tofonnat!on - II ’* fr “ sf j e. e. cox, Judges, c. a.c. for it. Write for it now. H. G. HASTINGS j CO , Atlanta, Ga.—(Advt.) A true copy from the rninates. 4t C. W. Wimberley, Clerk. We are prepared to take care of all meat offered for curing at the regular rate of one cent per pound. We now have over twenty five thousand pounds in our cold storage rooms. We have reduced the price of Monteval- lo Coal “The Worlds Best” to $7.00 per ton. Montevallo is cheaper at seven dollars than any other coal at five. Once a user always a user. To make room we must get rid of all cheap grade coal in our yard and will sell “Empire” (good coal) while it lasts at $4.90 per ton. • SSainhridge See Company Telephone ‘1S2 ) Yes, we sell Peroxide for 10c’ just like you pay more for. Tinleys Ten Cent Store. La Grippe Quid "m*Min.uTi. Johnson’s Tooic Bad CoMn are Quick relief take The Giant U; 3»«wed fcw germ a. inp Gena