The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, May 11, 1916, Image 5

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i jjiSalivates jlakes Y° u Sick Karaite on .1 L liver and you K, day's .vork I, , 0 rea- 50n why a P T K sickening, sail- r,“ when 50 cents I* bottle of D “ ns0 " s Imperfect substitute pleasant. vegetable L hl-ill start your liver (* , alontcl, but it Kv.» net end can and grown folks c.n t. nn - 5 Liver lone be- itr-rfevtiv Harmless. Uisa dangerous drug. “Lv and attacks your .lip a dose of nasty ^today anti you will f “> and nauseated to- Ifloofe a day’s work. Take Iful of Dodson s Liver Ud and you will wake feggaeat. No more bili- constipation, slugglish- Ldaehes, coated tongue Tstomaeh. Your druggist J you don’t find Dodson s Krone acts better than the L calomel your money is Jig for you. JB4IY-TISM |lcure your Rheumatism llgia, Headaches, Cramps, |Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and I,old Sores, Stings of Insects ■Anliseptie Anodyne, used in- Tliyand externally. Price 25c. STATE PRIMARY SET FOB SEPTEMBER 12TB Attempt to Have Pledge Printed on Ballots Fails of Carrying After Hot Debate. The next democratic state primary will be held on Sept, 12th, and the state convention will follow two weeks later at Macon. This was decided upon today by the state democratic executive ^committee. The rules of 1914 were adopt ed with the exception that de feated candidates will be allowed five days in which to file con tests instead of one day. An attempt to have printed on the ballot a pledge for voters to support the nominee was lost afler considerable debate in which Tom Watson and other rccalitrants were handled with out gloves by Ed Maddox, of Rome. The new Jewish Syonagogue will be dedicated Mav 15th with befitting and proper ceremonies according to Jewish rites. This is a beautiful and neatly con structed building on one of the most prominent spots in the city and a great addition to the town. The people of Bainbridge have taken a great pride in this building Jews and Gentiles and ! it will be a treat to the members of that church to worship in it. j The dedication services will be very interesting to all Bainbringe. [with the exchangees I Cedar Grove, N. Y., a r who kissed a pretty girl ot dismissed by his mem- ' Evidently the Grove was ■as dark as he thought.— 1 Now it is expecting too lofone little girl to kiss a pole board of Stewarts so irson could keep his job lit? I was rumored in Macon on inesday that Governor Harris [going to withdraw from the I The politicians are mighty nous to get him out so they J put one of their own in the lutive chair. The governor Bta politican and c.insequetly lot the man they want. But I about the people?—Darien ptte. You are very right in [assertion that the governor jot a politician, neither h is he memory. It would be M r for both he and the people Be would accept the advice of ■friends and retire. No man 1 carry Tom Felder on his *and win anything. le prohibition law is drastic j and may accomplish ws but there are other le laws needed. How about •die pistol and the little , er? Jhev are in the cast with the blind-tiger in nee n d severe punishment as L u anen -Gazette. There is L e , e,llsr P a >d to agitate the Fbusmess and hence allowed to stay while its l r , In cr tme’ murder and s aed is outlawed in the >»tol and liquor have n e tw in-hells of Georgia road? 8 ° ne because it; gave re n t0 pai .^ abators who iin sr ev ’® 1 ' raise d their voice , e pistol. They are lt j or , n au * U1 menace to civi- is more beautiful than ^ lul girls on a beautiful ’ 3 Carolina Editor asks. . Seas >-one beautiful girl eht \N spot on a m °onlit w,? aCon News - In a ham- ian> * n a hammock. The Waycross Council has en acted a drastic ordinance pro hibiting chickens from running at large. They may not know it in Waycross, but there are chickens and chickens.— The Savannah News. Laws of this nature should be made to apply to your neighbors chickens and not your own. We have some folks in Bainbridge that are too stingy to have fences around their places and kick like steers if a chicken wanders into their unfenced flowers. It merely means that they are nervy enough to ask the entire town to fence against them be fore they will build a fence themselves. This is a no fence country and if a man wants his neighbors chickens kept out of his garden he ought to have a fence around his garden. Who wants any better vegetable than a frying size chicken to eat anyway. Mr. Bryan is surely old enough to know better and it must be very embarrassing to his his friends to see him act like he does. He should be quiet while big questions are*in pro cess of settlement.—D a r i e n Gazette. When Bryan keeps quiet there will be a trick in it. That man would send his country to ruin for the short-lived glory of saying that I “told you so, or that you ought to have seem me before you acted.” If Waycross can’t find out what to do with that barrell of beer, we are sure they might gain some knowledge that would be valuable ninety six miles to the ’east. — Thomasville Times- Enterprise, Or why not try 104 west for this much needed in formation? With abbreviations at both ends, woman’s dresses have now reached the limit, is the opinion of a Gotham suffragette. Still they might begin now in the middle and work both ways. You can’t never tell, you know. —Macon News. What do you want to do, go back to the garb of Eve. ) . TITTLE GIRL PUTS JUST LIKE THE OTHER CHILDREN Capt. T. M. Harrell,’ Says Tanlac Gave His Child! Health. i 1 “It wouldn’t be doing right not to tel| you what you medi cine has done for our little girl,” said Captain T. M. Harrell, ot Atlanta, conductor on the Sea board Air Line for 25 years and one of the most popular men in the service. “She’s 11 years old,” he con tinued, “and has been a little sufferer all her life—weak puny, nervous, no appetite, no control over her kidneys and had head aches almost all the time. “The child never was strong, even from the cradle, and when she got a little older and would try to play with the other child ren and was too weak to romp and keek up with them, it just didn’t seem right, for she seemed so anxious to be with them and do as they did. It made me mighty sad and brought many a big lump into my throat to see her that way, and somehow 1 never could get used to it. “There was nothing on earth too good for her and we did everything we could think of to try and rid her of the pains and weakness and make her like the other children; but nothing seem ed to do her any good. ‘ ‘It lids always been a great worry to get something for her to eat that would agree with her and it was a disheartening job too, for almost everything would give her heartburn or sour stomach or cause her to wake up in the night with pains. We’d try first one thing after another and when everything would fail we would feel dis heartened and helpness. “There is nothing quite so oppressive as the feeling that gets hold of you when a little one of your own flesh and blood is sick and helpless and depend ing on you and you -can’t find anything on earth to help them. “I saw in the paper where Tanlac was helping so many women and elderly people with delicate vital organs, and who were in weak and nervous run conditions and as I studied over the matter I didn’t see why it couldn’t help children; so I got the child a bottle, for I believed it was the right thing. “I just can’t tell you how much good it has done for her, for she seems like a different child. She’s picking up weight and strenght right along, has con trol over her kidneys and sleeps and eats as well as any youngst er I ever saw. “Tanlac has given my child health and happiness, I do be lieve, and 1 don’t think there is anything like it in the world. She now plays and romps like the others and is just crazy about her Tanlac. Just now she phoned me from her home in Ingleside to be sure and get her a new bottle. “She goes to school now, is jolly and playful and enjoys life.” Tanlac is sold by leading druggists in all principal cities of the south. Tanlac is sold in Bainbridge exclusively by Willis Drug Co., and in Donalsonville by the Palace Drug Co., and Climax by the Climax Pharmacy, Iron City, Ga., by Strickland & Cordell, Brinson, Ga., by H. B. Harrell Supplly Co. ICE FOR THE FARMER J C E is as much a necessity for the country home as for the city home, and with the excellent highways now leading to Bainbridge from all directions every home in Decatur county can easily reach our ice plant with its ample supply of pure ar tesian water ice. The country home in future will not be without ice and the comforts derived from its use. The price of ice delivered from our plant platform has been reduced to thirty-five cents per hundred pounds S?a/nbr/dye See Company BAINBRIDGE. Telephone 152 I GEORGIA. MANY SEE MiRACLES iN GEORGIA Sufferers ^Rescued Swiftly Afler Hope Had Faded and Long Treat- ' ments Failed. Palm Beach Suits properly done for 50 cents. The Dixie Steam Laundry. Howe’s Red Inertubes. The very best and any size. Always fresh. P. T. Rich. Sufferers all over the State of Georgia have found a ready de liverance from the ills of stomach troubles peculiarly common in the south. Remarkable stories of health regained are told by hundreds who have used Mayer’s Wonder ful Remedy. It is a remedy with a record. The first dose is always proof to any stomach sufferer who tries it, It is quick Here’s what two other users say: REV. J. POWELL, Statesboro, Ga. —“I just escaped the operat ing table. Now I can eat what I please. I would be glad if everybody sufferering with stomach trouble could learn iof your remedy.” SALISTA THOMAS, 55 La France St., Atlanta, Ga. —“I have taken your remedy five weeks. It has done me much good. I feel like I hardly know my istrength— my appetite is fine.” Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy gives permanent results for stomaeh, liver and intestinal ail ments. Eat as much and when ever you like. No more distress after eating, pressure of gas in the stomach and around the heart. Get one bottle of your druggist now and try it on an absolute guarantee—if not satis factory money will be teturned. $25.00 Reward For evidence to convict any party or parties caught fishing in the Lake known as Merritt’s Lake on east side of Flint River about 1 1-2 miles below Hutchen son’s Ferry on land lot no 295. John L. Fain, Lessee. Blankets, Quilts and Lace Curtains nicely done, at the Dixie Steam Laundry. Fifty Homes For Small Farmers The Bainbridge Farm Company oilers for sale fifty unimproved farms of fifty acres each. Fronting on fine public roads, in good neighborhoods, close to schools, churches, railroad depots, telephones and rural mail routes. These lands are very level about two hundred feet higher above the sea level than the city of Bainbridge. Highly productive of all farm produce plenty of good water and healthful and will make ideal homo! for small farm ers. l’liese lands are guaranteed lo Ire of the very best in this county. The timber on them now is estimated worth five dollars per acre and the titles are perfect. Why not buy your farm instead of renting.’ Wc allow you teq years to pay for it. The difference between buying and renting is this: To illustrate say that you buy a farm unimproved for one thousand dollars, you improve the farm the iirst year with your own means sufficiently to occupy and operate it. You pay for tire farm as follows: You give ten notes of One Hundred Dol lars each with interest at 8 percent, from the date of the purchase. You pay one note eaeli year with the interest only on the note you pay. Your pay ments will be as follows: At end of first year $108.00; Hecond year $110.00; Third year $124.00; Fourtli year $1:12.00; Fifth year $140.00; Sixth year $148.00; Seventh year $150.00; Eighth year $104.00; Ninth year $172.00; Tenth year $180.00; Total $1140.00. If you should rent a like farm instead of buying you would pay an an nual rent ot $100.00. And in ten years the principal sum of $1000.00 The interest on your first rental payment would be $10.40 per annum for nine years amounting to $93.60 For second rental payment interest for eight years $80.20 For third rental payment interest for seven years $72.80 For fourth year rental payment interest for six years _ $02.40 For liftli year rental payment interest for five years $52.00 For sixtli year rental payment interest for four years. $41.60 For seventh year rental payment interest for three years .$31.20 For eightli year rental payment interest for two years __.$2o.80 For. ninth year rental payment interest for one $10.40 The total amount paid by you in ten years principal and interest being $176,800 Three hundred ami twenty-eight more for rent thun you would pay for the purchase of the farm. And the result at the end of ten years would ire that if you bought the farm it would be paid for in full with $1440.00 ami you would own it with all the improvement you put on it. Rut if you rented it instead of buying it you at the end of ten veurs would have paid out $1768.60 in rent sad you would own nothing. The above figures seem to be indisputable. We will also sell large tracts of land, from 1,000 to 10,000 acres, improved or unimproved on Liberal Terms, for colonizing purposes. But will not par ticipate in any colonizing organization or plun. Also will sell fifty unimprov ed City Lots in the city of Bainbridge on six years time. One sixth cash, and the balance in five equal annual installments with interest from date of saie. B. B. BOWER, Sr., President. 1 Bainbridge, Georgia, A Full Silver Chest is a woman’s delight. You can see them here in every variety. We invite particular attention to our flat table silver exhibit. It contains all the newest patterns and designs in spoons, knives, forks, ladles, etc. All of guar anteed quality and at prices re markably modest. N. J. SMITH & SON Oldest and Best Jewelers