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Fitzgerald Ten ‘Cent Co.
124 Ez,s;sr PINE STREIEJT
Holiday Specialties
ENovelties, China, Toys and
L Notions ~ o
SHOP EARLY!
Letters To Santa Claus
. Fitzgerald, Ga., Dec. 4, 1915. .
Mr. Santy Clause, City. by
+ ‘Dear Santy Clause:—l know
you are good and will let me
have what I want bceause I
don’t want so much. Iwanta
doll, a tearset and a heap of play
things. I want some’ pretty
picture books and some fruit.
If you will bring me what I
want I thank you. ..
Yours Lovingly, Virginia Hall.
801 South Lee Street.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Nov. 30, 1915.
Dear Santa Claus:—l want you
to bring me, if you can, a mov
ing picture machine, some roman
candles, a large drum, like the‘
boy Scouts use, some good books
and anything else you think I
would like,
Don’t forget the fruit.
Your Boy, Harvey L. Jay,
810 South Lee Street.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Nov. 30 1915.
Dear Old Santa Claus:—l am a
good little girl, six years old, and
1 live 810 South Lee Street.
Please if you can, bring me a
bicycle, a girls Indian suit, a
pretty doll that goes to sleep and
Big Remnant Sal
After our 14-Day Sale passes over
today, we will begin tomorrow
to close out our Remnant
Dry Goods,Shoes, Oxfords,
e . of I%y 5 53
Hats, Shirts, Ladies
Coats, Ladies’ Dresses,
IN FACT >
you find here with a Red
UL GRERapaE 'S T
‘Everythin\g at the Cut Price Sale, except Groceries
Our Grocery department during
balance of December will be
' lowest in the city, qual
ity considered.
;; Odds and Ends
:50c Size kit fish, closing out at ......\..............39¢
R 0 DOUDARARIE ONLY. wioiioiitei e ievriatiionesine. BB
;110 pounds thin Brown's Mule tobacco .........$3.19
Lot of $2 and $3 0xf0rd5............................51.48
;Lot of $1.50 and $2 0xf0rd5..........................98d
«Men's Suits and Clothing .... ALMOST NOTHING
+Ladies’ Coats and Dre55e5...............Y0UR PRICE
iMen's Pants at a greatly ............... Reduced Price
;Fancy colored Oil Cloth Remnant5..............15¢ yd
Yours for Big Bargains,
Dodd Supply Co.
lots of oranges and nuts.
1 Your loving little child,
.- Dorthy Jay.
Forest Glenn, Ga., Dec. 2, 1915.
Dear Santa Clause:—l want
you to bring me some candy,
fruit, nuts, a doll ‘and bed,
trunk and cart, a pair of skates,
and a girls bicycle. Bring my
brother Hanes some candy, fruit
nuts, a boys bicycle, a train, a
fire wagon, a pair of skates, a
wagon.
lam a little girl nine years
old, I am in school am in the
fourth grade, my little brother
is seven yearsold, heis in school
and is in the first grade.
As ever, Florence and Hanes
Dorminey.
Forest Glenn, Ga., Nov. 29, 1915.
Dear Santa Clause:—l am a
boy ten years old, lam in the
fourth grade, I want you to
please bring me some fruit, some
candy, a chief bicycle, a pair of
boots, and a .t}’nx,ee‘blade knife,
that will be all for this time. ,
Yoursiruly, ©
‘ William T. Dorminey.
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS MONDAY DEC. 6, {915
"’ "‘ASHTONNEWS
: % VSR D TSmg L RS 5
- If you ‘fail-once don’t mind;
only a simpleton expects to win
every time. 4
- ‘We are glad to learn that Mr.
Horace Harden is rapidly im
proving from a severe case of
typhoid fever. We hope he will
soon be able to attend school. :
Miss Nellie Willingham visited
‘her sister Mrs. Elmer Willing
‘ham in the city Saturday and at
tended the show in the after
‘noon. .
If any one shows you a kind
ness, it is a sign you ought to
pass on., 1f you don’t first thing
vou know you won’t have any to
give or keep. :
Like the subject of an impera
tive sentence it'is understood
that our school is.one of the best
district schools in the state. We
have now on roll 170 pupils. We
are- ‘expecting a ‘music teacher
now soon, from Osierfield.
The person who will nurse
spite and hatred for another will
find that it will be:a terrible re
tribution -to himself later on.
He who has a grouch toward any
living soul never enjoys life fully
at any time. - :
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Sewall
Friday evening'a fine baby boy.
Massy Reeves spent Thursday
night with Arthur Wilbanks.
' Miss Louis Smith the Carnegie
Libarian ' presented our school
with a generous supply of maga
zines which will aid us. in our
supplementary readings, = -
Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Reeves
were visitors at the home of ‘Mr.
and Mrs. L. E. Kilpatrick Sun
day. , , g
To control your temper at the
right times means more than one
might think 'and it shows wis
dom. When the head of the
house shows that he is nervous
and “off his base,”” everybody
soon gets that way too. What
he needs at such time is to stop
all business for a little while and
get himself in hand relax, think
of nothing, command his forces
to obey him. They will and he
will go back to work with a
brave heart.
Our school piano was tuned
last week and is now in good con
dition, Within a' few months
we hope to entertain the public.
Only a Christmas entertainment
for the school will be given dur
ing this month.
Miss Alice Fussell spent the
past week in the city as the
guest of her sister and attended
the carnival,
The man who must back up
everything he says with an oath,
hasn’t any statements worth
backing up.
Mr. S. L. Padgett Sr. of Ocilla
was in town Saturday on busi
ness.
We Can Fix It
Fitzgerald Bicycle & Repair Shop
Keys Made to Order
Bicycles to Rent at Reasonable Prices
218 S. Grant St.
New Grist Mill
We have installed a'New Grist Mill ‘and will
buy your corn or grind it for you. Highest
prices paid. Best care of your corn.
UNION COTTON OIL COMPANY
Mrs. Chas. Pedden =
Gains 27 Pounds
“I’fhave just finisled wy third'
bottle of Tanlack and have gained
twenty-seven pounds” was the truly
remarkable statement mide by Mrs:
Charles Peden, resldent at 550 Mill
street, Huntsville, Ala. Mrs. Peden
is one of the best-known and highly
respected women of that thriving
little city, where she has made her
home for a number of years. |
“When I commenced taking the
medicine,” she continued, “I only
‘weighed ninety-eight (98) pounds;
now I weigh 125 pounds, and.never
)felt better in my life. For years I
‘have suffered with a bad form of
stomach trouble, constipation and
pains in my side and back. At times
the pains took the form of torture
and I was twice examined and each
time I was told that I had appendi
citis and that an operation would
be my only hope. I had fallen off
until lonly weighed ninety-eight
pounds and was so weak I could
hardly get around. ¢
“I had no appetite at all scarcely,
and what little I did eat would
cause gas to form in my stomach,
which grve me palpitation of the
heart, sick headaches and a dizzy
feeling about the head. When these
spells came onme I would get aw
fully nervous. I worried about my
self until I could rest and sleep but
little.
- “Thad fallen off until I was al
imost ‘skin and bones,’ and my
Miss Florence Kilpatrick is
able to be in school again after &
few days’ illness. it
. The ery of keeping the boy on
‘the farm has reached home, but
how about keeping the girls on
the farm? Are not they as im
portant -to you as your boys?
Give yourgirl a chance for her
l';life! Let her know that she has
Ja place, and a good one, too, in
all that is going on in the farm.
lAnother thing, how about her
purse? You give your boys ways
in making money, your girls do
just as much as your boys but
half of you do not believe it.
See to it that her purse does not
look like it had been run through
a clothes—wringer. ' It is humili
ating for her to have to ask you
for money. Give her a monthly
allowance and allow her to spend
it as she chooses. It will give
her a feeling of self confidence
and respect you as she has never
done before, Help her to know
everything, the boys know about
farm work, and give her some of
that work to do once in awhile.
Love her so that she never can
get away from the farm without
feeling that something in her
heart has been torn up by the
roots. Be the best friend she
will ever find in all this world.
Then she will have no desire to
leave the farm or cause you any
unpleasantness. Make the farm
and home so dear to her that she
will never be just as happy any
where else.
LEONNE DELORAINE.
: e . - m——
PP IR R 2 o el " ol
A % The Fhinkers of B
G/ AT ot R Country Are the |
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\\\\i’ \% K must be mild I—l‘e can’t
» z )P\ afford to use a strong, rank
TRIES AT - tobacco with its come-back 3-
iBl S on the nerves, -
But PICNIC TWIST was just made for the folks
‘who don’t.use. their -heads merely asa - o
hat rack.» .- e Eopdd R e
+ +As'mild and mellow as tobacco can w;f :
be, yet as full-of taste and 'as long-last- pa
ing as the strongest chew. Thatis the i.(
right combination, - : %fi b '
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'CHEWING TOBACCO '[l S
Try a 5c TWIST, then get one of Q\' b(p(c’fi"cx' \
those air-tight freshness-preserving - !?N A ) RRY
drums of eleven TWISTS, oY R
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E ARSI <> T
'strength and energy were slowly‘
leaving me. I had a dread of the
ifuture and could see nothing butl
the operating table and knife. I hadi
a'perfect horror of an operatlon, but
had ‘made ‘up my mind that'it was
either life or death, and preparedito
submit to it. I had made all pre
parations for the operation and
called on my sister to tell her good
by as I did not know whether I
would live to see her again or not.
My sister begged and plead with me
and told me to wait and try a good
tonic for a while: 'The'next'day as
I returned from the comsultation
room I thought of what she said,
and as'l had heard so mach about
Tanlac I decided to try it as alast
resort and stopped at Gilbert’s Drug
Store and got a bottle. Of course,\
I had lost hoart and had no faith in
the medlcine; but to please my sis
ter I made up my mind to take it,
and oh, what a happy day that wasl
for mel! -
“I never returned for the opera
tion, but just kept taking the Tan
lac. Right from the start I' began
to feel better. The medicine seem
ed to take hold right at once. It had
a soothing efféct, and in a few days
I felt no pain at all. I was so happy
over the wonderful improvement in
my condition that- 1 sent for my
neighbors to tell them how much
better I felt. I sent and got another
bottle of Tanlac. and have just
finished taking my third bottle and
feel like I .have been made all over
into a new woman. 1
“As I have said before, I now
weigh 125 pounds, and my improve
ment has been so rapid that none
of my clothes are big enough for
me. I will have to make them all
over again, I now have a ravenous
appetite and my husband says I am
eating him out of house and home.
F ARMERS!
' For planting now until’ January 15th, buy
Th;y will mature earlier énd producé more
- grain than any other variety.
| Why buy. the so-called Western'Rust Proof Oats
and run the risk of getting' Nut Grass, Johnson
Grass and other pests on your farm? A
~ I am offering Fulgham Oats grown on my own
farm, thoroughly recleaned and free from all light
. oats, chaff and foreign substances.” {3 !
. $l.OO a Bushel
E. K. FARMER
by g B RY B R GIR T
Oyster Supper
There will be an oyster supper
at Pine Leyil church on Friday
night December 17, 1915. Be
ginning at 6:3oo’clock, will serve
oysters, crackers and ‘pickles,
will also ‘have ‘fish and sand
witches.
Everybody is cordially invited
to come and bring others.
The money raised will go felr
painting the church.
Don’t forget the date Decem
ber 17. Every one will recieve
a welcome so come.
The committee,
Eva Mae Royal,
Lelia Peugh,
: Lewis Wilcox,
Jack Peugh, .
Jesse Vaugh.
I have even gone back to my coffee
which I was told not to touch. Those
terrible pains in my back and head
have all disappeared and Isleep like
achild. Tam no longer nervous,
and when I get up mornings I feel
refreshed, cheerful and bright, I am
now able to attend to my household
duties, and I feel as if I had started
life all over again. My husband is
highly delighted and my recovery is
the talk of the neighborhood. Ido
nothing but rejoice all day long
over the recovery of my health and
praise Tanlac to everybody.
“T feel so grateful for my escape
from the operating table and the
knife that you may publish what I
haye said; you may, if you wish, tell
other women suffering as I was to
come and see me and I will be glad
to tell them all about my case.”
Tanlac is sold exclusively in Fitz
gerald by Denmark Drug Co. Ady.