Newspaper Page Text
A Burnt Child
Dreads Fire
Before You’re SICK or HURT
Protect Your Income
7 CENTS A DAY
Keeps Your Savings Safe
Pays Doctor’s Bills
Eases Your Mind
The Greatest Health and Accident
Insurance Company in the World
is THE
C3 ‘4 1
X G. B. Alexander, President CHICAGO
"EVERY TIME THE CLOCK
TICKS, Every Working Hour
-IT PAYS-
A Dime to Somebody, SICK HURT’’ Some¬
where, who is or
More Than $1,000,000 a Year. Ask
M. M. SAPP,
District Manager
FitzgeraJd, Georgia*.
♦♦♦♦<*♦*♦<»>♦♦♦♦♦♦«♦♦♦<>♦♦♦«•*<»
How C ’Tea^pest Cotton
Is Grown
The cheapest cotton grown to¬
day is on something like this plan:
After the land is properly broken,
bed up with a reversible disk, two-
horse, laying-off and iinishing one
row at each time through. With
the one-seed at-a-time cotton plan¬
ter and fertilizer distributor put
about 125 pounds high-grade ferti¬
lizer in with the seed, planting the,
seed and distributing fertilizer all
at one trip.
When seed begin to sprout go
over with weeder, breaking crust
and killing all grass and weeds on
two or three rows at one trip.
Repeat this weeding every six or
eight days in the opposite direction
until cotton has four to six leaves,
then thin to a stand and use a side
dressing of high-grade fertilizer,
attached or combined with a culti¬
vator. applying side dressing' with
fertilizer and cultivating at least
one row at a trip with a team and
one hand. 1 prefer to alternate
the cotton scrapers or sweeps with
the shallow cultivator plows. Just
when plants begin to fruit, 100
pounds of nitrates sown broad¬
cast before the cultivators will tell
in color of plants in twenty-four
hours if there is a good supply of
moisture. It pays to keep the
rows clean and crust broken until
bolls begin to open, at which
time crimson clover seed should
be sown just in front of the last
plowing - .—-J. (J. Stribling in
Raleigh (N. C.) Progressive Far¬
mer and Gazette.
Excursion R-a.tes
To Albany, Ga., for the Geor¬
gia Chautauqua, April 17-24 1910,
via the A. B. & A. U. R. Tickets
will be sold April 16th to 23rd in¬
clusive, and return limit April
25th 1910. Ask the ticket agent.
\V. 11. Leahy,
(ieneral Passenger Agent.
Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. W. M. Harris no doubt lias
the biggest collection of fruit
trees, vegetables and Mowers for
the number of acres cultivated of
anybody ' in the county, on his
small farm just about half a mile
north of the city limits, lie
purchased the place from Mr. B.
A. Fold, the Fitzgerald truck
farmer. Just now he is furnish¬
ing his table with most delicious
strawberries picked from his farm,
the first of the season in Ocilla.—
Warning
Tornodo insurance policies
Numbers 902 to 925. inclusive, of
the Security Insurance Company,
of New Haven, Conn., have been
lost, mis-laid or taken from the
office of our former agent, in Fitz¬
gerald. Ga., Mr. J. L. Googe,
deceased, and the public is hereby
notified that said policies are void
and have never been issued by any
authorized agent of said Company.
A suitable reward will be paid for
the return of these policies to Mr.
Dan B. Harris, Manager, South¬
ern DepaiUncut. Atlanta, Ga.
27 4t
THE FITZGERALD LEADER, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1910
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The Road to Prosperity—A Bank ft ■
A Good Example SI f
“I am a good example,” writes Mrs. R. L. Bell, of
McAlester, Okla., “of what Cardui will do for suffering a
M
women.
“1 suffered with my head and back, for over six years,
and although 1 tried everything, 1 never could get any¬
thing “Cardui to do me any good, until 1 began to take Cardui. ss
has surely helped me and built me up and 1
am so thankful that 1 have found something that will do
me good. 1 feel so much stronger and better than 1 have
in a long time." vi.
It is well to make up your mind before you are sick
what medicine you will take when you are sick.
MfCA 'Y.i
J 47
The Woman** Tonic
You will be glad to take it when you are tired, mis¬
erable and when life seems a weary grind. It will put
new thoughts into your head, fresh courage into your mind.
If not sick now, at least burn Cardui on to the pages
of your memory, so that when you are sick you will ask
for it without thinking.
It sick or weak, get a bottle today. At all druggists. i
Write to: Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chatianneoga, Tenn.,
for Special Instructions, and 64-page book. "Home Treatment for Women," sent free.
*mmm- ■
Pvillman Sleeping Car Service
VIA
Ga. Sou. & Fla., R_’y*.
Between
Valdosta and Atlanta-
Leave Valdosta, G. S. £ F. Ry.. 11:45 p. m.
Arrive Atlanta C. of Ga. Ry., K:05 a. m.
Sleeping Cars are placed at Valdosta for the reception of Passengers
at 9:00 p. m.
Southbound Sleeping Cars are bandied on trains leaving Atlanta
via the C. of Ga. Ry., at 9:10 p. m., connecting at Macon with G. S.
& F. Ry., train No. 3, arriving in Valdosta at 5:30 a. m. Cars
may be occupied as Valdosta until 7:30 a. m.
For further information regarding schedules, rates, Sleeping Car
reservations, etc., apply to any agent of the G. S. & F. Ry., or
address: C. B. RHODES, Gen. Pass. Agt.,
Macon. Ga.
Locals Of Community As Lately Seen
Mr. W. N. Phillips, of Tifton
spent Sunday here.
Air. J. I. Hicks, of Macon, was
in the city Tuesday.
Mr. T. E. McAfee, of Atlanta,
was in the city Sunday.
Mr. B. F. Williams, of Ocilla,
spent Sunday in the city.
Col. J. B. Wall was a business
visitor to Folkston this week.
Mr. C. E. Crawley spent Sun¬
day in the city with his family.
Mr. James Harmon, of Ocilla,
was among - the visitors in the city
Sunday.
Mr. V. F. Carter, of Valdosta,
spent Sunday very pleasantly in
the city.
Mr. M. Harvey Sikes, of Ocilla,
was among the. visitors in the city
Monday.
Mr. W. B. Hammock, of Fitz¬
gerald, spent yesterday in the city.
—Ocilla Star.
Mr. Bob F letcher. of Fitzgerald, O 7
spent part of Thursday in the city.
—Ocilla Star.
Mr. Marker Crawley went to
Jacksonville Wednesday, to spend
several days.
Mr. Leander Bateman has ac¬
cepted a position with the City
Drug Company.
F armers
We sell the seed a fine
time now, the diy spell is
broken. Yours for success.
The Bee Hive. A. Bruner
& Co.
Mr. D. Salisbury, of Waycross,
was a visitor in the city Sunday.
Mr. E. L. Campbell, of Thomas-
viHo, was among the visitors to
to the city Sunday.
Editor E. L. Hanes, of the
Leader spent thejweek-end in At¬
lanta with Mrs. Hanes.
Mr. C. W. Hanlon, of Ocilla,
was in the city Monday, shaking-
hands with his many friends.
Mr. Wileyjjj Williams was a
prominent Fitzgerald visitor to
the city yesterday.—Ocilla Star.
Mr. George Collier, of Indian
Springs, was in the city this week,
guest of his niece. Mrs. J. B •
Wall.
__
Mr. Harry. Burnett a nd Mr.
Will Bruner, of the Enterprise
force, spent part of this week in
Waycr ss.
Mr. M. C. Vandegritf, of At¬
lanta. was in the city during the
week, shaking! hands with his
many friends.
Mr. W. H. Leahy, General
Passenger Agent of the A. B. & A.
was among the prominent visitors
to the city Sunday.
| |Messrs.*(Tom j§ Taylor, Lance
Cooper, and Eugene Watson spent
several days of this week on the
Allapaha river,[fishing.
Col. B. J. Reid, of Milan, is
having some very attractive im¬
provements made on his West
Central Avenue home in this city.
Messrs. J. P. Cox and D. J.
Henderson. Jr.,]Jjmade a business
visit to Fitzgerald, in Mr. Cox’s
Cadillac Wednesday morning.—
Ocilla Star.
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-
ifai
We Can Olfer A Monument
A
of surprising artistic merit at OZ
price much below your expecta¬
tions. The offer includes a choice
of several designs which were
executed during the winter months.
With Ili8 Addition tf The Name
and any inscription you may de-
sire, they are all ready to erect
when you wish them placed. If
you have a monument in mind
suggest that this is an offer welK
worth your attention. Cal)
see our work at
219 North Grant St.
Fitzgerald Marble & Granite Go
F. H. Williams of Fitzgerald, is
now Holmes lilling Hardware a position with Watt-
liams will Co. Mr. Wil¬
move his family to this
city in a short while.—Cordele
Dispatch.
Manv telepnones in the city
have been out of commission this
week, on account of damage done
to the wires by the disastrous fire
on Monday. The telephone w
though, com¬
pany, has had a force of
men at work all week, and man}'
whose phones have been of no
value to them for several days,
have had their service restored.
The home of Mr. Isidor Gelders
on Central Avenue presents quite'
an improved appearance after
having been in the hands of the
carpenter for several weeks. Be-
sides putting in stone piers, and
the addition of a bay window,
Mr. Gelders has had the house re-
papered throughout and the yuW
inclosed by stone coping.