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firocery Bills Smaller;
fee better and more of it
__ h . t ' S w hat comes of using Luzianne Coffee
■ ' „ s ‘ tor its flavor and economy all over the
fami ’ T r y t he entire contents of a one-pound
S ° U -c^or iing to directions. If you are not satisfied
ea .V r in every way, if it does not go as far as
W1 ; ;l1 ds of any cheaper cpffee you have ever
'"'d-Xll your grocer you want your money
baci ind he’ll come straight across with it.
Write for premium catalog.
The Reily-'Taylor Co. New Orleans
001> MUSIC GALORE
IN BOOSTER MINSTREL
Time Minstrel will be Staged as a Benefit for the
Baseball Association. Catchy Music, Snappy
Jokes and Good Clean Vaudeville will be Offered.
-inbridge has one more big
. show on tap before the
atrical season o’Kwes for the
mer months, The Roosters
nstrel, given as a benefit for
Baseball Association promises
be worth while and to rival
road minstrels that were
n here this season.
catchy music, snappy
es, and clean vaudeville will
offered in the program. Every
utefrom the time the curtain
still the audience files out
door after the last number
calculated to please. Not a
w moment will be allowed in
show, The usual “stalling”
racteristic with amateur min-
els will be entirely eliminated,
he minstrel from beginning
to end was prepared by experts
in New York City and the music
numbers are the latest. New
tunes straight from Broadway
will be offered,
j Bainbridge is fortunate in hav
ing some high class comedians
who can work black face as well
as the professionals who visit our
city. Eight of the cleverest in
the city will play “end” in the
Boosters minstrel. In addition
to the eight black face artists,
twelve ballad singers will be used
in the chorus. This with a twelve
piece orchestra that will be used
will give the minstrel thirty two
people in the cast.
This musical treat will be stag
ed on the night of Friday May
5th, at the Callahan theatre.
ifty Homes For Small Farmers
I lie Hainbriilge Karin Company olTers for sale fifty unimproved farms
liily acres each. Fronting on fine public roads, in good neighborhoods,
:e t» schools, churches, railroad depots, telephones and rural mail routes.
I hose lands are very level about two hundred feet higher above the sea
el Ilian the ciiy of Bainbridge. Highly productive of all farm produce
nu of gomi water and healthful and will make ideal homes for small farm-
Thesc lands are guaranteed to be of the very best in this county. The
wr on them now is estimated worth five dollars per acre and the titles are
feci.
" hy nut buy your farm instead of renting? We allow you ten years to
for it. 1 he dillerence between buying and renting is this: To illustrate
1 at you buy a farm unimproved for one thousand dollars, you improve the
"' ie lirsl year with your own means sufficiently to occupy and operate
o" pay for the farm as follows: You give ten notes of One Hundred Dol-
cath with interest at 8 percent, from the date of the purchase. You pay
nine each year with the interest only on the note you pay. Your pay-
“ts will be as follows: At end of first year $108.00; Second year $116.00;
a« year $124.00; Fourth year $182.00; Fifth year $140.00; Sixth year $148.00;
ent i year $l-i(!.00; Eighth year $164.00; Ninth year $172.00; Tenth year
JJ: lota! $1440.00.
If i should rent a like farm instead of buying you would pay an an-
*1 tent ot Hini.oo. * 6 *
■' nd m l<m years the principal sum of _ .$1300.00
ncte-i 'hi your first rental payment would be $10.40 per annum
" r nii '« years amounting to $98.60
tthh'r ' n ma * l ,il > rment interest for eight years $88.20
fourtl^ tJ pay,nent i nter est for seven years $72.80
rtiftb * ' eir rtn,a * payment interest for six years $62.40
'isixt!' * ental payment interest for five years $52.00
rseveni'h " lr rtnta ' Payment interest for four years , $41.60
1 eightl * * ' renta * Payment interest for three years $81.20
rninrh i<?ai re,lta $ payment interest for two years $2o.80
e Nll |. H ' ir remul Payment interest for one *10.40
;r Ce hury V' U ' aiC * ky you in ten years principal and interest being$176.800
'teha.se ■ * ■. 8n ' *"’ en ty-eight more for rent than you would pay for the
‘bought-" alm ’ -^nd the result at the end of ten years would be that if
nitwit! ! ar ' n *' would be paid for in full with $1440.00 and you would
fine it * lil0 improvement you put on it. But if you rented it instead of
n w 0ul<i ' ' * le end of ten years would have paid out $1768.00 in rent and
a not hmg. The above figures seem to be indisputable.
tinimprv o.i" ° Se . 11 larRe tr acts of land, from 1.C00 to 10,000 acres, improved
■pat e j n . ' ' 11 l-'bteral Terms, for colonizing purposes. But will not par-
City iiuuitting organization or plan. Also will sell fifty unimprov-
tbalance , ' ! ° of ® a * n $>ridge on six years time. One sixth cash, and
1 ' e ei l ua l annual installments with interest from date of sale.
B. BOWER, Sr., President.
Bainbridge, Georgia.
: a Gri
ia «® n d Bad Colds are caused by gems. Foi
J ^ Quick relie*’ take The Giant Grip Germ Ki .»
' 4Dli ~ Tablet. *6 = Johnson’s Tonic
NEWSPAPER TALK
Among the things that can’t
be found in Southwest Georgia is
a town that is not growing. — Al
bany Herald.
From the way they divided up
the Georgia booty one would
think they Dixie Highwaymen.
—Savannah Press.
There’s one campaign that
Georgia can afford to keep in
full swing right though the year,
and that is the campaign for
better roads,—Albany Herald.
The bluefish are said to have
deserted the Georgia waters.
They must have found every-
too optimistic for anything feel
ing blue.—Savannah Press.
The people of Georgia do not
want a politician for governor.
If the state could have been
saved by a politician with bigj
promises the job would have
been complete long ago. This
year a man of the people will be
chosen, and he will be a man [
with experience, a man of busi- j
ness, a man of ideals and a man
with some purpose other than to |
his political IriChds close up to
the offices Emd to the public
treasury,-Moultrie Observer,
Augusta is going to have a
sprintr May festival despite the
fire. It may be necessary for
some one to build a fire under
Savannah to get one started,—
Savannah Press.
Reduced Prices
For Ice
Effective at once we will reduce the price
of sacked ice f. o. b. our plant to the follow
ing rates:
100 lbs 40c
200 lbs 75c
300 lbs. . . $1.05
Over 300 lbs. in one shipi^^ 35cper cwt.
We are prepared to serve you on short
notice. Send us your orders by telephone
or mail. Enclose money order or check
with order.
The LatU’ens County Citizens, ij
in referring to the appearance j
of governor Harris at Bartow.'
calls attention to the ffiCt that j
Thomas and Brooks couties were'
in the Hardman list two years
ago, and says tnat sentiment in
these two counties has changed
greatly, and are now confidently
claimed by Governor Harris.
We are inclined to the opinion
that the Citizen is correct in this
statement. —Thomasville Press.
• *
f/fainbridye See Company j
Telephone 152
bainbridge;.
ge:orgia.
Why is Virginia “the
tobacco man’s tobacco”?
■jV/TAIN reason is because it gives to a
^ A cigarette the one thing that no
other tobacco can give—“character”}.
And without “character” a cigarette is
just “a smoke”.
It is this highest-grade Virginia
Piedmonts are made of—ALL Virginia!
Golden, lively, mellow as southern sun
shine ! -- 1
Don’t put off real smoke satisfaction
any longer. Don’t “wait till tomorrow”
for that “character”you’ve always want
ed in a cigarette—
Try Piedmonts—todayl
NOTE : — Vi rgi n ia tobacco
costs more per lb. than any
foreign-grown tobacco [except
florae few rare kinds, a small
quantity of which is used in
blending some of the most
costly cigarettes]. But what
makes cigarettes of foreign*
grown tobacco coat more than
they should are ocean freight 9
import duty and wasteful hand
ling—3 items of expense that
don’t make a cigarette any
better and that never touch
Piedmonts, made of highest-
grade Virginia, grown right
here in the U. S. A.! So,
Piedmonts can afford to givo
you better quality/
The ALL Virginia cigarette—
3Wmont
*Che Cigarette of Quality
iO, for S &
cAlso "Packed 10 for 10$
VALUABLE COUPON IN EACH PACKAGE