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THE BAINBRIDGE POST-SEARCH LIGHT
Cardai “Did
Wooden for Me/’
Declare* TbU Lady.
B Si
"1 suffered for a long
time with womanly weak
ness,” says Mrs. J. R
Simpson, Of oi bpruce
t., Asheville, N. C. “I
jinally got to the place
where it was an effort for
me to go. 1 would have
bearing-down pains in
my side and back — es
pecially severe across my
back, and down in my
side there was a great
deal of soreness. I was
nervous and easily tip-
set
TAKE
ARDUI
te Woman’s Tome
"I heard of Cardui and
decided to use it,” con
tinues Mrs. Simpson. "I
saw shortly it was bene
fiting me, so I kept it up
and it did wonders for
me. And since then I
have been glad to praise
Cardui. It is the best
|i woman’s tonic made.”
' Weak women need a
tonic. Thousands and
■ thousands, like Mrs.
>1 Simpson, have found
£ Cardui of benefit terthem.
Try Cardui tor your trou-
Mt. Carmel Dots
Everybody’s mind is in a whirl,
wondering what Santa Claus will
bring. We hope he won’t forget us.
Miss Myrtle Lee spent the night
kvith Miss Irma Gordon Thursday.
Miss Annie Hendley spent Friday
night with Miss Alma Cloud. They
went Christmas shopping Saturday.
Gee! Wish I could see some of the
presents they bought.
k Miss Minnie Lee Blocker spent
Tuesday night with Miss Maud Hend
ley.
hay Buss! Look out for a present.
YOU LOVE
LIFE MORE
Takes on a Different Color When
\ our Blood Is Rich and
Free From Poison
TRY TAKINK PEPTO-MANGAN
If You Feel Listless nnd Depressed,
Your Blood Is Clogged and
Sluggish
Without knowing why, you find
yourself feeling unhappy. You go
around day after day half asleep. In-
I saw Eura Belle go into the Ten Cent t eres t in what is going on around you
Store Saturday. | lags and life becomes dull. The beau-
Messrs. Paul Hendley and Elbert l - v of radiant sunshine, lovely flow-
Barber dined with Mr. John Griner ’ crs a, ’d the entrancing miracles of life
Sunday. you miss entirely. Living, eating,
Mr. Rdseoe Gordon and Miss Myrtle keeping, become more or less of a
Barber, Mr. Harris Hendley and Miss bore -
Eura Belle Gordon attended Sunday
School at Bethany Sunday.
] Oh! \ou boys, where are you? One
, little girl was awful lonesome Sun
day. Girls, you better propose fast.
Leap Year is nearly gone. Some of
you will be old maids by next Leap
Year.
The program for Mt. Carmel
| Christmas tree is as follows:
| 1. A Matrimonial Advertisement.
I —Misses Myrtle Lee, Alma Cloud and
Etta King and Messrs,
Paul Hendley.
2. Recitation—Miss Mary Gordon.
| 3. Recitation—Miss Maude Hend-
That is what clogged, sluggish
blood does to you. It poisons your
thoughts. You are only half alive.
You need a good blood-enriching
tonic. Take Pepto-Mangan for a few
weeks and notice the big improve
ment. Pepto-Mangan is an agreeable
tonic and is heartily endorsed by phy
sicians.
Your druggist has Pepto-Mangan in
both liquid and tablet form. Buy
whichever you prefer; one has exactly
Harrie and j thc same effect as the other. Make
sure you get genuine Pepto-Mangan
Ask for “Gude’s" and look for the full
name, “Gude’s Pepto-Mangan,” on the
package.—(adv.)
d
ble.
ALL
DRUGGISTS
4. Song—“Glory be to God”.
5. Betwix and Between—Miss
Irma Gordon.
6. Santa Claus on the Train—Miss
Maude Hendley.
7. Song—“Jolly Old Santa Claus.”
8. Recitation—Miss Minnie Lee
Blocker.
9. Song—“Little Servants.”
10. Recitation—Miss Etta King.
11. Santa Claus and the Mouse—
Miss Bertha Murkeson.
12. Recitation—Miss Nellie King.
13. Why He Wouldn’t Die.—Mrs.
Harrie Hendley.
14. Christmas Song.
15. Recitation—Miss Irma Gor
don.
j 16. Song—“A Mother's Prayer.”—
Misses Alma Cloud and Etta King.
I 17. Letter to Santa.—Myrtle Lee.
18. Willie’s Breeches.—Hobson
- Lee.
I 19. Silent Night.
j Everybody is invited.
j The Post-Search Light is only $1.50
a year. Why not subscribe V
A Bethel School
Girls’ Version
Of Longfellow’s Psalm of Life.
DR. 8IGO EHRLICH
DR. M. A. EHRLICH
Physician and
Physician and Surgeon
Surgeon
Children Specialist
EHRLICH & EHRLICH
312 CLARK STREET.
Office Phone 182.
Residence Phone 46.
NOTICE
LeGette and Company vs. H. B.
Odell, inc.
Fulton Superior Court, November
Term, 1920.
Motion to establish copy certifi
cates of stock in Fulton Superior
Court, November Term, 1920.
To Whom it May Concern:
To H. B. Odell, inc.:
A petition in writing having been
presented to me by LeGette and Co.,
in which it alleges that two certain
certificates of stock, each being No.
26 for ten (10) shares of preferred
and common respectively, made, evc-
cuted and issued to him by H. B.
Odell, Inc., a corporation of Fulton
County, Georgia, have been lost or de
stroyed, nnd annexes to its petition
sworn copies thereof:
You arc therefore called upon to
show cause, if any you have, in the
Superior Court of Fulton County,
Georgia, at 9 o’clock a.m. on the 22nd
day of January, 1921, why said copy
certificates, sworn to as aforesaid,
should not be established in lieu of
said lost originals.
This 10th day of December, 1920.
I J. T. PENDLETON,
| Judge Superior Court, Fulton County.
SHERIFF SALES
Georgia, Decatur County.
Will be sold before the courthouse
door in the city of Bainbridge, said
count#, on the first Tuesday in Jun-
| uary, 1921, during the legal hours of
sale, the following described proper
ty, to-wit: One small roller- sugar
mill, and one 60-gallon kettle. Levied
on as the property of Niger Miller, to
satisfy a tax fi. fa. issued by T. M.
Battle, for state and county taxes for
the year 1919, due and unpaid.
This Dee. 8, 1920.
S. W. MARTIN, Sheriff.
“Life is real, life is earnest—
Life is more aid means more than
many u person realizes. “And the
grave is not its goal—
When we are carried to our grave
we are not at the end of life. What is
the beginning for when the reward
is reaped.
“Dust thou art, to dust returnest”
Our bodies ore made of dust and
return to the dust from whence they
come.
“Was not spoken of the sold”, but
the soul continues its unknown jour
ney.
“Not enjoyment and not sorrow—
God did not put us into the world for
our lives to be all pleasure without
sorrow, for our strength is measured
by our ability to hear our sorrows,
neither did he intend for us to have
all sorrow and no pleasure. “Is our
destined end or way, God’s plan is
best;
“But to act that each tomorrow
find us farther than today.
May we strive to be found tomor-
rom farther in His grace than we are
today and be prepared to meet those
who have gone before.
“Lives of great men all remind
us—There are livps of men who have
gone before that shine as a beckoning
star leading us on to higher, nobler
things nnd if we only would let our
light shine, others will see our good
deeds and, “We can make our lives
sublime. “Ami departing, leave be
hind us. footprints on the sands of
time.
Time still wends its ceaseless course
and ever and anon our footprints will
be noticed by others.
“Footprints that perhaps another
Sailing o’er life's rugged ihain-
Some forlorn and shipwrecked
brother
Seeing may take heart ngain—
It may be my loved one or it may
be yours that will be attracted to the
Straight and Narrow way by some
dead—something in our life. Who
can tell? This old life is filled with
sorrow for all.
“Let us then be up and doing—
There’s no time for idleness, Jesus
said, “I must be about my Father's
business.”
“Nor our onward course abate—
We have no time for lagging,
“Still achieving—.
Keep trying,
“Still pursuing—
That which is good,
“Learn to labor,
For Christ’s Kingdom
“And to wait.
For our Great Reward.
sure as you
are a foot high—
you will like this Camel Turkish
and Domestic
Y OU never got such cigarette-
contentment as Camels hand
you. Camels quality and expert
blend of choice Turkish and choice
Domestic Tobaccos make this
goodness possible—and make you
prefer this Camel blend to either
kind o ftobacco smokedstraight!
Camels mellow-mildness is a
revelation! Smoke them with
freedom without tiring your taste!
They leave no unpleasant ciga-
retty aftertaste nor unpleasant
cigaretty odor!
Give Camels every test then
compare them puff-for-puff with
any cigarette in the world!
“The Bird of Paradise”
Seldom his it ever been known that
a dramatic play is the actual cause
of the biggest musical fad known in
years, but thut is absolutely true in
this case, and is how it came about.
Ten years ago, “The Bird of Para
dise,” the Hawaiian drama coming to
the Callahan Theatre on Thursday
night, December 30th, for the first
time in Bainbridge, was produced at
the Morosco Theatre, Los Angeles,
by Richard Walton Tully. The author
brought five of the native singing boys
from the islands and introduced them
in the play. They were thc atmos
phere of the story, df course out in
Calofornia they were no remarkable
thing, as Hawaiian players had been
heard for years in the various cities
on the Pacific coast, hut when Tully
brought the play to New York, the
Eastern people began to grow fond of
the dreamy, languorous music of the
tropics. Then the boys sang for a
well phonograph company and from
that time the fad began to grow. Now
in New York there isn’t a high class
cafe that hasn’t from two to ten Ha-
waiians. All the managers are suing
them this season in their new produc
tions and it is safe to say that there
is hardly a home of any well known
family that hasn’t the “ukulele,” the
national instrument of Hawaii, in the
parlor. The fad will last until some
thing unusual turns up and then will
die out, but whether it does or does
not, “The Bird of Paradise” can go
down on record as having put the Ha
waiian music on the Eastern map.
CITATION—Administration
Georgia, Decatur County.
To All Whom it May Concern:
J. J. Dixon having in proper form
applied to me for Permanent Letters
of Administration on the estate of
Callie Mae Dixon, late of said county,
this is to cite all and singular the
creditors and next of kin of Callie
May Dixon to be and appear at my
office within the time allowed by law,
and show cause, if any they can, why
permanent administration should not
be granted to J. J. Dixon on Callie
May Dixon estate.
Witness rny hand and official sig
nature, this 6th day of December,
1920.
T. B. MAXWELL, Ordinary.
Have you paid your subscription
to thc Post-Search Light?
DARK AND POWERLESS
- HOMES,
TOWNS AND FARMS
Over 3-4 of Georgia is without electricity.
The people living where current was unob
tainable in 1917 are shown by the black spaces
below. The white shows those living where they
could get light and power.
In darkness and lack of available power,
Georgia leads the 30 States listed below.
The Water Power Bills will change this.
GEORGIA
MASSACHUSETTS
NEW YORK
CONNECTICUT
EL
k:
~95MI
gar
83.2% I
76^*)
NEW JERSEY
NEW HAMPSHIRE
CALIFORNIA
UTAH
PENNSYLVANIA
MICHIGAN
RHODE ISLAND
MAINE
ILLINOIS V™
MINNESOTA
MISSOURI
OHIO
OREGON
INDIANA
NEBRASKA
WISCONSIN
VERMONT
ARIZONA
KANSAS
WYOMING
IDAHO
IOWA
MONTANA
COLORADO
FLORIDA
NEVADA
Only four of the States named have as much
water power as is annually thrown away in Geor
gia’s undeveloped water power.
Georgia has 10 times the water power of Mas
sachusetts, far more than New York, almost four
times that of Pennsylvania, eight times that of
Michigan and seven times as much as Illinois.
Only six of the thirty States paid as high an
average rate for light in 1917 as did Georgia. The
Georgia rate has been raised more than once since
then.
Why, then, has Georgia so little light?
Why is our industrial development being
throttled by the lack of power?
Itemember these facts—Ask yourselves these
questions when you read the anonymous attacks
upon the Water Power Bills and the Municipal
League now being sent from Atlanta to appear in
the press of Georgia.
The Water Power Bills, if passed, will enable
the people of Georgia to do what people in other
States are doing.
The Bills will break the grip of the monopoly
which the Power Companies have upon your water
powers.
Electricity at reasonable rates will be put in
reach of the whole state.
Do not be fooled by the corporations.
Their purpose is only to keep Georgia tied and
helpless, while the .corporations play games of
high finance with Georgia’s God-given wealth of
power for the stake.
Your rights and the rights of your children
are in peri).
THE STATE SHOULD ACT
(Published by the Municipal League Georgia.)
NOTICE
All of my Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing, and
Making your Clothes Fit, are Guaranteed.
Bring your Work and get
it done right. Best work for less money. When you have
old clothes to sell, bring them to me, or call and I will come
and get them, if price is right.
Quarterman’s Pressing Club
|J Phone 280-W Ha ini)ridge, Gl.
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