Newspaper Page Text
GET FULL SIZE BOTTLE FREE
National Drug Company Will Give to the First Ten Purchasers
of a Bottle of Naturetone Saturday, An~tuelr Bottle Free.
HATURETONE, the new Liver Med
icine is meeting with such saleg ev
erywhere that its manufacturers cann
ot supply the demand.
The National Drug Company
hasjust received a shipment, and
to introduce quickly, will give
FREE a full size bottle Saturday
to the first ten purchasers of a
bottle.
Everyone needs a Liver Medi
cine at times, and NATURE
TONE is a preparation that aids
Nature and tones the entire sys
tem. It stimulates the liver and
thoroughly cleanses the bowels
without making you sick, or caus
ing any loss of time from your
daily occupation. And it does not
Hudson is a getter too. Got
lots of unfavorable criticism when
he was Commissioner of Agricul
ture. Legislature got after him
with an investigating committee.
Found him grossly incompetent
and took his authority away from
him in part.—Adv,
NOTICE OF ORDER FOR
LEAVE TO SELL LAND
To All Whom It May Concern:
Notice is hereby given that ap
plication will be made to the
Court of Ordinary of Ben Hill
County, Georgia, at the first reg
ular term aiter the expiration of
thirty days from this notice for
leave to sell a portion of the land
belonging to the estate of M. B.
Coftee for the purpose of paying
the debts of the said estate. This
the 4th day of September, 1916,
A B COPFE, :
3. B. NICHOLSON, JR.,
Co-Administrators listate of
M. B. Coftee. 4t
Crisp was the friend of the Fed
eral Reserve Bank act and there
can be no more PANICS. He is
a thinker—thinking at all times
how best to provide for and pro
tect his countrymen.—Adv.
AGENTS—BSSO.OO weckly. Sell
l&r. 15 household inventions, New,
live, qnick sellers. General agents
~‘getting rich. Every home buys
one or more. Samples furnished
active workers. Write NOW.
Address: MATL, ORBER, Box
625, Fitzgerald, Ga. Ik
(oldenberg’s Store
- 116 East Pine Street
We are still selling at old prices
fast colored Percals - 10c¢ yd.
Good heavy outing -10 c yd.
Good soft Bleaching -10 c yd.
Heavy Sheeting - - 7Vac yd.
Good fast colors Dress Ging
hams - -t e 10c yd.
All colors Serges 38 inch
i e ooc
52 inch blue and black Serge 98¢
Oyeralls - - - 98¢
All Wool Blue Serge Pants ...... . ..... $2.98
Good all Wool Blue Serge Suits(fast colors) $9.00
School Suits for Boys, best values ...83.50 to $5
Just Received--- '
50 Mens Suits, all fancy patte}rns. bl\u? and brown,
eSB
These are the best values ever shown in this city
and inspection will convince you.
Our prices are low as ever. No advance at this
store.
Cell and seeus. No trouble to
show "Goods.
Goldenberg’s Store
I 116 East Pine Street
’leave you censtipated, as so many
other medicines do.
There is not a harmful ingre
dient in it, but only those “aids
to Nature” which are prescribed
by every physician.
No not allow the waste matter
to remain in you and poison your
entire system, but when consti
pated or have the headache, feel
sluggish and dull, go to your
druggist, and get a bottle of NA
TPRETONE. Take it according
to directions and if you are not
satisfied with it, he will refund
vou the 50c¢ paid for it.
It is guaranteed to comply with
every requirement of the pure
food and drug law, and is safe for
every member of the family.
TO THE VOTERS OF THE
THIRD CONGRESSION
AL DISTRICT
I hereby respectfully announce
my candidacy for re-election as
your Representative in the Sixty-
Fifth (65) Congress, subject to
the Primary to be held Septem
ber 12,
During the short time I have
been your congressmaa, 1 have
sincerely endeavored to serve you
faithfully, and if my efforts and
record meet with your approval, I
will feel greatly honored and pro
foundly grateful if you will give
me your support in the coming
clection. "Congress has been in
almost continuous session since
you elected me, and duty required
me to stay here, which prevent
ed me from visiting you as often
as I wished. The Ways and
Means Committee is now daily
working on a Revenue measure;
being on that committee, I must
remain here until the new tax law
is pasesd. As soon as Congress
adjourns, or before then, if public
business will permit me to leave,
I expect to canvass the District,
meet the people personally, and
talk to them face to face, both in
dividaully and on the stump.
Ii re-elected, I promise to dis
charge the duties of the great of
fice with fidelity, and to the best
of my ability.
From the depths of my heart 1
thank vou for your past kindness
to me.
Cordially yours,
Dd-Sep-19. Charles R. Crisp.
Advertisement
LEADER-ENTERPRISE PRINT
ING PAYS.
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 191¢€.
m——_>f_,fif
DEFIES 8-HOUR LAW
President of Santa Fe Won't
Comply, He Says
Topeka, Kan., Sept. 7—E. P,
Ripley, president of the Atchin
son, Topeka, and Santa Fe rail
way, declared in a formal state
ment tonight, that the Santa Fe
does not intend to comply with
the Adamson eight-hour law, re
cently enacted by congress to
avert a threatened railroad strike,
until ordered so to do by the
United States supreme court.
When the Dixie Highway Cen
tral Short Route wanted a bridge
across the St. Marys River Crisp
found it out and GOT BUSY IN
Congress and the measure pass
ed.—Ady,
LIBEL. FOR DIVORCE
Mrs, (Elizabeth Taylor~ vs.
Wallace W. Taylor.
Libel for Divorce.
Superior Court Ben Hill Coun
iy
The .defendant, Wallace W,
Taylor, is hereby required to be
and appear at the next term of
Ben Hill Superior Court to be
holden on the first Monday in
October, 1916, to answer the
above petition; in default where
of, the Court will proceed as to
justice shall appertain.
Witness the Hon. W. F. Geo
rge, Judge of said Court, this 12th
day of July, 1916.
D.W. M, WHIFLEY,
2tweekly 2 mo. Clerk.
Many of our biggest men will
vote for Crisp because we need
a getter in Congress. He has been
getting good measures through
for the masses. He's a GET
TER.—Adv.
ORDER TO PERFECT SER
VICE %
Lovie Martin vs. Ira A. Martin.
Libel for Divorce in Ben Hill Su
perior Court, October Term, 1916.
It appearing to the court by the
return of the Sheriff in the above
stated case that the defendant
does not reside in said county, and
it further appearing that Ira A.
Martin does not reside in the
state:
Ordered by the court that ser
tice be perfected on the defendant
by the publication of this order
twice a month, for two months
before the next term of this Court
in the public Gazette of said coun
ty in which Sheriff’s Sales are or
dinarily published. This the 17th
day of May, 1916, And it is so
ordered. ~
W. F. GEORGE,
Judge S. C. Cordele C.
Bussell & Bussell,
Petitioner’s Attorneys. |
twice mo-2mio. |
Crisp wanted Hudson to meet
him in joint debate, Hudson
side-stepped. Probably Crisp
might have turned the bright
light on Crisp’s high record in
Congress and Hudson’s record of
error as a Georgia Legislator.
Hudson might not have been able
to meet such an overwhelming
contrast.—Ady.
ST. WILLIAM’S CATHOLIC
CHURCH.
West Central Ave.
H. A. SCHONHARDT, Priest,
Services at 9 A. M. Sunday
morning.
The public is cordially invited.
Advice of Mother no Doubt Pre
vents Daughter’s Untimely End.
Ready, Ky.—*l was not able to do
anything for nearly six months,” writes
Mrs. Laura Bratcher, of this place, ‘‘and
was down in bed for three months.
I cannot tell you how I suffered with
my head, and with nervousness and
womanly troubles.
Our family doctor told my husband he
could not do me any good, and he had
to give it up. We tried another doctor,
aut he did net help me. ‘
~Atlast, my mother advised me to fake
Cardui, the woman’s tonic. 1 thought’
it was no use for I was nearly dead and
nothing seemed to do me any good. But
I took eleven bottles, and now I am able
to do all of my work and my own
washing. |
1 think Cardui is the best medicine in
the world. My weight has increased,
and I look the picture of health. *
If {ou suffer from any of the ailments
peculiar o women, get a bottle of Cardui
today. Delay is dangerous. We know
it will help you, for it has helped so
many thousands of other weak women
in the past 50 years.
At all druggists.
“'m te: Chattancoga l% c?& l.?‘dln;
fi|“‘"ll'i Dept.. chum::!‘| . |'N° .fi::.
m:&“ J‘.&'&‘-’L plain wrapper, 5.0. 13¢
GEORGIA NEEDS MORE
AND BETTER SCHOOLS
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 7—Appro
priations for state colleges during
the last seven years have increas
ed 100 per cent, while those for
the common schools have increas
ed only nine per cent, according
to Alex E. Keese, of Atlanta, who
is making a race for state school
commissioner against M. L. Brit
tain, and who has prepared a
number of interesting statistics
as a result of a close study of pub
lic education questions in Geor
gia for a number of years.
The state of Georgia appropri
ates annually $135 for the boy at
college and $5 per year for the
child in the country school, ac
cording to his figures, and he in
quires:
“Why such a difference? Only
one in five of the public school
pupils go beyond the seventh
grade. Only one in twenty who
completes the public schools go
to college. Only, one in thirty
five of the public school pupils
graduates at a university.”
More and better common
schools is the slogan of Mr.
Keese in his speeches, and he has
many constructive ideas for im
proving the general standard of
public education for the masses.
Nobody attacks Hudson’s pri
vate life—it’s his career as a Geor
gia legislator and Commissioner
of Agriculture that. is so badly
off—his public career.—Adv.
WILL ARTHUR TRAIN’S
DREAMS COME TRUE
AS JULE VERNE'S DID?
In the October Cosmopolitan
Magazine that is now on sale ap
pears the first installment of a
story, “The Moon Maker,” by Ar
thur Train, that will take you
right back to “The Man Who
Rocked the Earth” and will re
call most forcibly to your mind
Jules Verne and H. G. Wells.
Mr. Train has written this story
in collaboration with Professor
Robert Williams Wood of John
Hopkins University, as he did
“The Man Who Rocked the
Rarth.”
Train’s dreams may seem ex
travagant to you as you read
them in Cosmopolitan. Then
again, perhaps, they will come
true, as most of Verne’s did—
who knows? Certainly, it will
start an interesting line of specu
lation in the mind of the imagina
tive reader,
Regular
Advertisements In
This Paper
Are
Money Makers
Crisp is such a powerfaul Con
gressman that Republicans and
Democrats alike recognize his
best wishes and views.—Ady.
Crisp must have had.great con
cern for Fitzgerald and power and
influence in Congress to get our
Postoffice second on the list ahead
of a thousand others.—Adv. ;
D
Eating a Good
Meal ls Easy! -.
o Hovs} and where to buy it is a great
problem to many housewives - - - _
- You get results when youbuy your groceries
| from us. You get quality and quantity for .
a very moderate price. ‘That is the secret of
buying for a ‘good meal.” Try it. "
Too busy to enumerate the many geod
things to eat. But follow the crowd to
our store and find what you want.
Your Grocer,
L. O. TISDEL
Phones 25 and 113
Hudson paid lots of money to
Fertilizer inspectors who, it
seems, never inspected at all.
Legislature investigated and cut
out lots of the inspectors. Spend
ing your money and mine for
nothing. Not dishonest, but
simply had no busiticss about him
as a CommisSioner. He weighs
probably over two hundred
pounds and wouidn't he make
SOME CONGRESSMAN?—Ady.
LIBEL FOR DIVORCE
Ben Hill Superior Court, Octo
ber Term, 1916
Robert Hutson vs. Elizabeth
Norris Hutson.
TO - ELTZABETH NORRIS
HUTSON: You as defendant in
the above stated action are here
by required to be and appear at
the next term of the aforesaid
court, to be held on the first Mon
day in October, 1916, then and
there to make answer in the
above stated case.
Witness the Honorable W. F.
George, Judge of said court, this
the Bth day of August, 1916,
D W. M. WHITLREY,
(Clerk.
My Brother and 1
WHAT is your attitude toward your fellowman?
ARE you liviug a life of Selfishness or Service ?
ARE you interested in your fellowman? If not,
why not?
DO you ever think of the condition of your fellow
man?
DO you know whetter one kind word from you
would help him?
DO you know whether afriendly smile would cheer
him? '
WOULD YOU enloy an hour of social fellowship?
WOULD you enjoy an hour of spiritual fellowship?
YOU have, in your midst, an organization whose
motto is: :
“MY BROTHER AND L.” - the Wesley Bible Cless.
IT’S PURPOSE—To put into practice the teachings
of CHRIST---The BROTHERHOOD of MAN.
IN MONEY, if you are rich or poor.
IN SPIRIT, if you are rich or poor.
YOU are welcome.
DO you desire to know your fellowman better?
DO you desire to help him?
THEN join our class. It will help you and help us.
WE need your advice, your help. Will it benefit
you? It will. ;
THE writer of this has been groping in dark for
years,-- :
HE KNOWS what this class has done for him and
what it will do for you.
AN old maxim, - He that knows and knows he
knows he is wise--follow him.
YOU could not find a better place to go than to the
Carnegie Library.
Every Sunday morning at 9;30, this is the place we
meet. Do you know who our TEACHER is? Come
up next Sunday and see. It will supprise you.
We hope to see you present next Sunday.
WESLEY BIBLE CLASS,
Carnegie Library
Crashes into sour bile, making you
Sick and vou loge 2
91y ¢ work.,
Calomel salivates! It’s mercury
Calomel acts like dynamite on a slug
gish liver. When calomel comes inte
contact with sour bile it crashes into
it, causing cramping and-.nausea.
If you feel bilious, headachy, consti
pated and all knocked out, just go to
vour druggist and get a 50-cent bottle
of Dodson’s Liver Tone, which is a
harmless vegetable substitute for dan
gerous calomel. Take a spoonful and
if it dosen’t start your liver and
straighten you up better and quicker
than nasty calomel and without mak
ing you sick, you just go back and
get your money.
If you take calomel today you’ll be
sick and nauseated tomorrow; besides
it may salivate you, while if you take
Dodson's Liver Tone you will wake up
feeling great, full of ambition and
ready for work or play. It’s harmless
pleasant and safe to give to children;
they like it.