Newspaper Page Text
iy . GUARAR
7)), TEED
e¥ & BY A
A BANK DEPOSIT
IR Y R.R. Fare Paid, Notes Taken
=™ 560 FREE COURSES
5 Board at Cost. Write Quick
AMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, Go
/. T i
Wi [
1 s
i -// 2 fiiiee
i/ |<< il
A “l 2 a
'.’ ES@V’&-?:-P“@,‘{ sTy
READ UP ON OUR MEAT.
ou will find it a meaty subjec!
B, begin with, and a money
jaking one to end with, if you
BUY YOUR MEAT HERE
-, his is where you will find the
* choicest cuts. Come in, Ours
"is a good place for all kinds of
‘meat. They're properly cured
and ready for use. Don’t shop
. for meat, buy it of us.
CENRAL MARKET:
'PHONE NO. 97.
£. M. GRAHAM & CO.,
Contractors = Builders
: Dealers in :
All kinds of Building Material,
* Tombstones & Headstones.
, : QPR IGEe
Cor. Sherman and Pine St
TO' WANTERS OF THE
.. BEST TYPEWRITER MA
. CHINE s
s GET THB..s,
Price $35.
.., NONE BETTER.
AT THE ENTERPRISE OFFICE:
y 7]
¢ 7??/// :
] RS ‘
g T 9% » .
¥ fiflflp'
"HIGH CLASS
Goods are not looked for at sec
ond class stores. “Birds of a
feather flock together,” and it’s
S 0 in buying
- DRUGGIST SUNDRIES.
In buying them you go where you
know you can get what’s reliable.
Our drug store is that place. The
best people trade with us because our
goods are Al and not high priced.
7 :
J. HAWKINS GOODMAN,
Next to First National Bank.
1
Al L
N |
AR | ;-‘r\“@“‘n‘;{t..‘{\’\:
for gl | el
Fi)|t d Y
,'.—.:* '-"/":i’r; S !f ‘%‘ 5
{ 50 izfij o m&&n\‘ws&%
N bel v R
. ‘l“"»_ : _.‘_*v”‘-..’%‘),’g:",__ o
3 .~, L#j- 'Zé‘;;‘;{; "fi ‘? c’ i
S el s 1
, TO REACH
The ultimate resting place the
service of the :
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
must be sought.
Experience and high class ap
pointments enable us perform
all necessary services satisfac
torily. ;
Preparations for burials and
final interment are carried out
with :dp]:fl icacy an skill, j
SUUTHERN-HERGANTILE GEUILDING C.
- sl ~ ot
WITH A LAME BACK?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everybody who reads the news
papers is sure to know of the wonderful
] cures made by Dr.
W Kilmer’s Swamp
(N7 [Root, the great Fid
; ’ ney, liver and blad
(A der remedy.
<& It is the great med
\nL ical triumph of the
G nineteenth century ;
= di daf
e | discovered atteryears
{ ‘ (82N J| of scientific research
okl s by Dr. Kilmer, the
et * eminent kidney and
hladder specialist, and is wonderfully
successful in promptly curing lame back,
wric acid, catarrh of the bladder and
Bright’s Disease, which is the worst
form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp=Root is not rec
smmended for everytking butif you have
tidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be
‘ound just the remedy you need. It has
Jeen tested in so many ways, in hospital
work and in private practice, and has
sroved so successful in every case that a
special arrangement has been made by
vhich all readers of this paper, who have
tot already tried it, may have a sample
hottle sent free by mail, also a book tell
ng more about Swamp-Root, and how to
indoutif you havekidney or bladder trou
jle. 'When writing mention reading this
senerous offer in this paper andsend your
ddress to Dr. Kilmer / Ry
% Co., Binghatton, gl ',’;:,‘ !'zfl@flfi
N. Y. The regular & “_‘:@:EB ,‘,ig:*f
ifty-cent and one- il
lollar size bottles are Home of Swampßoot.
jold by all good druggists. Don’t make
iy mistake, but remémber the name,
Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
wd the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on
avery bottle.
Look Them
In the Lye ;
When they tell you there is
any other cigar quite half as
good as our G. B, S. 5c Smoker.
[t is the most pleasing of all,
after dinner smokes and guar
anteed satisfactory in every way.
C. A. JOHNSON,
Manufacturer.
oy T
- Tax Receiver’s Roun,
| O
i On the following dates I will be at
‘the places named below, for the pur
pose of reciving state and county
tax returns for the year 1906.
The date fixed for the valuation of
property is the 31st day of March.
1906
A.McMillan,
Tax Receiver I, C.
FIRST ROUND
sEcoNd ROUND.
DS Te st it 1A RIROR
; BB i DEIORTO I
4 g oo Dorminey’s Mill.
0D 11, 10 e eRI EARR I
Sol e s JRODBYLS,
AR s s Tewinvitles
ol e Lt L Milnne,
S A 0 BB e e IR
THIRD ROUND
May 29 ..comerreriinnnnn. DOrminey’s Mill.
“ 30, June 1, 2............. Fitzgerald.
Joned. o e QNG BTN
ox L Onfenfiald.
i@ e s o Miinnte)
0o L el Rabßßtß,
23 28 18 iTG
' 18,19, 20 ..........................Irwinville‘
$100,000.00 'TO LOAN
On Farms, Also Choice City
Property in Fitzgerald.
6 and 7 % interest, and payable
annually. Time 5 years, but may
pay back allor part at the end of
any year and stop interest.
Prompt attention given all
written inquiries. Come or write.
Ellis & Ellis,
Padrick Building, Tifton, Georgla.
| HOW’S THIS. |
We offer One Hundred Dollars Re-‘
ward for any case of Catarrh that
cannot be ciored by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure.
| F. J. OHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
-~ We, the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney forthe last 15 years, and
believe him perfectly honorable in
all business transactions and finan
cially able tocarry out any obligations
made by his firm.
WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cureis taken inter
nally, acting directly npon the blood
and maucus surfaces of the system.
Testimonials'sent free. Price 75 cts
per bottle. Sold by all druggists,
Take Hall’s Family Pills for consti
pation.
BLANKS FOR SALEI
Warranty Deeds,
Bonds for Title.
Warrants, ;
All Justice Court Blanks.
ANotes, Eto.
Seut by Mail. Now is the time
to order. . .
THE ENTERPRISE.
The death of Senator David
Wark, the oldest member of the
Canadian parliament, recalls an an
ecdote which illustrates his remark
able independence. At the age of
101 he was still holding thg seat
which had been his for almost half
a century, ,
During his last years his family
had been worried about his habit
of traveling alone in midwinter
from his home in I'rederickton, N.
8., to his post in Ottawa. They
urged him to let his daughter ac
company him.
Senator Wark would have none
of her.
“A man of my age,” he said, “has
all he can do taking care of him
self without having a woman to
look after.”
Bubbly Creck. .
Chicago has a noble, if somewhat
odorous, waterway called Bubbly
creeck. The stockyards discharge
into it. It has been discovered that
the famous stream will burn. Says
a local paper:
“That this historic section of the
city’s commercial waterway can bub
ble, and does bubble, and that it
can exude smells compared to which
a rendering plant is as a fragrant
morn in budding June, and does so
exude, has long been a matter of lo
cal history, if not pride. But that
the famed old swimming pool can
be converted into kinetic heat ener
gy by the mere application of a
match has remained for the Weekly
Health Bulletin to disclose.”
It is now proposed to set the river
on fire! 5
The Girls of Caddo.
(addo has some real live girls. A
tenderfoot struck this town and pro
ceeded to accumulate an overstocked
cargo of gayety. He selected for his
subjects a couple of girls with quite
as fervid an appreciation of fun as
he had himself. Simulating anger
because of his advances, they took
after him and chased him across
back lots, through a Mexican’s ta
male patch, and the last seen of him
he jumped over a wagon yard fence
and fell. He arose, and when he
faced his pursuers he fell on his
knees, and his prayer was: “Stop!
Stop! You don’t intend to kill me,
do you?” The man still lives, and
the girls wear a smile that won’t
come off.—South McAlester (I. T.)
News.
“Fat” Years In the South.
The south is entering upon her
third “fat” year. live more lke
the two just passed will place the
south in a position to withstand a
long siege of “lean” years, although
there are no reasons for apprehen
sion. But in these fat years should
we not make provision for necessi
ties to great progress and enlighten
ment? More and better school
houses, more and better teachers and
opportunity to every child to learn
to read and write, insistence that
every child shall learn to read and
write—insist upon these things
now, and in the future the south
will gather more in the “fat” years
and lose less in the “lean” years.—
Columbia (8, C.) State. ,
Lighting London.
It is not now for the first time
that London’s council ig proposing
fo” take over the responsibility of
hchting its streets and houses. In
1716 the old common council,
thought itself most public spirited
in passing an act by which “all
housckeepers whose house, door or
gateway fronts or lies next {o any
strect, lane or public passage or
place of the sald gity, shall in every
dark night—that is, every night be
tween the second night after each
full moon and the seventh night
after each new moon—-set or hang
ont one or more lights, with sufli
cient cotton wicks, on penalty of a
shilling.”
Cork Varnish For Ships,
In order to protect the interior
of ships from the humidity caused
by condensation upon the metallic
walls during sudden changes of tem
perature the Italian marine has ex
perimented with a kind of hygro
scopic varnish, or coating, the es
sential component of which is
ground cork, which is consolidated
by pressure with copal and litharge
and applied to the walls. Dr. Belli
finds that the cork varnish absorbs
the watery vapor of the atmosphere
to the extent of cight or nine grams
for every square meter of surface
exposed.—Youth's Companion.
A Story From Carbo.
The following interesting lirtle
paragraph comes from the Nogales
(Ariz.) Oases: “From Carbo comes a
report that one day recently an
American rancher in that vicinity,
fearine a descent by Yaquis, poison
od a demijohn of mescal and then
‘absontod himself from home over
'night. Returning the next day, he
found tweniy-three dead Indians in
and about the house.”
- WHAT '!' ’ ' ! PIGRAM?
Primarily an Inscription, It Is Now of
Vastly Greater Dignity.
An epigram in its primary signifi
cation was mothing more nor less
than an inscription. It was “some
thing written” to mark a spot or an
event. It was the form oZ words at
tached to an altar or a monument or
an image to show whose image or
monumeni or altar it was. If you
consecrated a secular elm to Pan
you pinned an epigram on'the bark
to announce that fact. If you pre
sented to a friend an amethyst cup
engraved with a figure of Bacchus
you embodied in an epigram your
sentiments, It i a mistake to sup
pose that these picces were in their
first inception satirical, but the Ro
mang made them so, and as time
went on the trick of writing them in
Latin as well as in Greek involved
an attention to concentrated effect.
The epigrammatist tried to fill his
little glass as full as possible, and
there were bubbles of malice round
‘e brim: Gradually the idea grew
that an epigram ought to finish with
a snap; that the very end of the last
line ought to contain the essence of
the lampoon. This type of the form
was amusingly defined by Dr. Ed
ward Walsh, a poet of the latter half
of the eighteenth century:
An epigram should be—if right—
Short, simple, pointed, keen and bright,
A lively little thing;
A wasp, with taper body, bound
By lines, not many, neat and round—
All ending In a sting.
The poetical shape was always
preserved, since without it an epi
gram would scarcely have been any
thing at all. A French wit, La Mon
noye, said that an epigram in prose
is a cavalryman dismounted. ‘But a
large proportion ofsthe Elizabethan
and Jacobean epigrams were beg
gars on horseback who if they had
been turned off their rthyme would
Lave been beggars and nothing else.
The idea was that a joke or a state
ment of fact, whether grave or gay,
had but to be rhymed to become a
piece of literature worthy to be
prinied and preserved in the ar
chives of a poet’s writings.—Ed
mund Gosse in Harper’s Magazine.
A Triumph of Elementary Education.
The following little incident hap
pened in a London suburb: A boot
maker’s apprentice, a lad of about
fourteen, delivered a pair of boots at
a tradesman’s house. The trades
man’s wife, accustomed to orderly
business ways, asked the lad after
handing him the money for the
boots o receipt the bill. At this re
quest the lad showed the greatest
confusion, so that the woman to re
assure him said, “Just receipt it as
a matter of business.” Whereupon
he wrote laboriously something on
the paper. In the évening when the
tradesman examined the papers on
the spike he came upon a bootmak
er’s bill, at the foot of which was
written in large letters in a school
boy hand, “As a matter of business.”
It was the youthful apprentice’s lit
eral interpretation of the demand
for a receipt as a matter of business.
—TLondon Mail.
Jewels on the Sick List.
Precious stones are subject to se
rious changes. The discoloration
which attacks them when they have
been exposed to the air for a long
time is spoken of as a malady. The
influence of light makes itself felt
plainly on topazes and garnets. The
garnet turns much paler in a short
time, while the topaz assumes a
darker shade and even loses the
brilliancy possessed by it when
freshly cut. The most sensitve
stone in this respect is the opal. It
guffers always by excess of heat.
Owing to its chemical composition it
is sensitive to all changes of temper
ature. Pearls also deteriorate very
casily. Indeed the only way to keep
them in good “health” is to wear
them next to the skin night and
day. Society women usually do so.
Tempered With Mercy.
An English gentleman went to a
village in the north of Scotland for
a week’s fishing on tle lochs in the
district. He was very unfortunate,
having caught nothing in the first
five days of his stay. Of course his
hotel bhill, a boatman’s hire as well
as sundry 6dd amounts made the
fishing rather expensive. On the
last day, however, he killed a nice
salmon, and in the course of eonver
sation with the boatman he said,
“Donald, do you know that fish has
cost me £10?7 “Aweel, sir,” replied
Donald, who took life very easily,
“gll things be mixed wi’ mercy. It’s
a blessing ye didna catch ony mair.”
Paraguay Tea.
Mate or Paraguay tea is made
from the leaves of the Brazilian hol-
Iy and takes the place of tea in near-
Iy the whole of South America,
where it has been employved by Indi
ans from time immemorial and by
their conquerors and settlers since
the seventeenih century. The tree if
left alone will 2equire a height of
fifteen or twenty feet, bnt the plants
from which the mate is collected are
maderate sized shrubs, with nimer
oas stems from one foot. S
k i
While it is true that Scrofula may be acquired under certain conditions,
it is usually inherited. * Parents who are related by the ties of blood, or who
have a consumptive tendency, or family blood taint of any character, are sure
to transmit it to their children in the form of Scrofula. Swollen glands,
brittle bones, poor digestion, weak 2 s o
eyes, Catarrh, emaciated bodies and nherited Scrofula, and about seven
Ptk Sion e te 12 bl ot e
principa ways 1n wiilc € dais- ¥ 2 5
ease is manifested. The blood has 2%523?’21&%52’ 3?1‘33 zafilénhgvglel ‘fil’:fi’;%
been diseased from birth, and being in 2 _ Btraw, &chwasa.l’eis“adequbgo ny
?h}is tclimdbiti;m cax(linot properly nour- SB. ‘?,r;Aftefi- t:f;gix;?:g%fitgés,’ I Ife};;l :
b 3 g a 1 . wonderful change for the . lcone
ilt i& lo y dtm Sc_rofula 1§ the r.e tinued to takae f‘t foor aboutesixrmonthn,
sult. ; ;)ere Ita£yddlls)ease like this ta}l;'mhg in aill aboaxt fifteen bottles,
can only ‘be reached, by a constitu- Whichentirely curedme
tional remedy and nothing equals Monteymery; V! Weth STOOKTON'.
S. 8. S. as a cure for it. It cleanses and strengthens the deteriorated blood,
drives out all scrofulous and tubercular deposits, and. there is a gradual but
sure return to health, S. S. S. supplies to the
_ anaemic, lifeless blood the properties necessary
-to build back to strong, robust health, and does
this gently and so thoroughly that no signs of
® 8 @ the disease are ever seen in after life. Being
PURELY VEGETABLE. Isnure%yl vegetable S. S. S. is the best remedy for
i crofula; its harmless but healing ingredients
enter into the circulation and replace wax-like, bloodless faces with vigorous
strength glowing with health. Book with information about Scrofula and
medical advice free. FHE SWIFT SPEGIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
GRANITOID,
The Only Fire Proof Building Haterial.
~ Prettier Than Pressed Brick.
Cheaper Than Rough Brick.
Granitoid Sidewalk and Door-steps.
HAYES,
The Qranitoid Man,
Corner Pine and Lee Streets.
; FITZGERALD, GA. '
Cj : i
Fitzgerald, Ocmuigee & Red Biuff Railroad.
SOHEDULE EFFECTIVE DEC 22, 1905,
SOUTH BOUND. NORTH BOUND
eddeah ot DR I e B e ee AL LSO (IR L
NO. sl No.ll l STA'TIONS INo 2 INo 4
egl Bde sl Nenl st e i e D OoISORT L e e
P.M. [A. M. ) A M,|PM,
100 l 780 'Leawe.............. WRIGHT .............Axtiye 300
110 Tl 1s o TERNIRER . i {1 LS
TR DAY e I S A
140/ 8 10 | Arrive...........F1TZGERALD............Leave |ll 20/ 2 30
el eee gl 8 Ui, gal il e L Ll
All trains daily except Sunday
M. W. GARBUTT, Bupt. B.J. REID, G.F. &P. A
M
_—_—____—__———_————-——————_'——'———_-_—
A B
ATLANTIC & BIRMINGHAN RAILWAY,
ALIL, TRAINS DAILY.
TIME TABLE EFFECTIVE FEB'Y. 18, 1906,
WEST BOUND. .
Lv Fitzgerald...o oo 11:25 @, M.~ 7:55 p. m.
' Ap. Gordele: ... 19050 Py 9:20 p. m.
Ar Vionma o 1814 Do M 9:43 p. m,
Ar Montezuma. ...ooeeeeeeeee. 2:16 po m. 10:40 p. m.
Ar Oglethorpe .......ececeeeee 2:20 p. M. 10:50 p. m.
AP Macon. = = . ...oadopom. s 12:60might =
AP Atlanta ...l .oor e 75D P, 7:50 a. m.
Train leaves Montezuma for Talbotton and interme
diate stations at 7:00 &. m., daily except Sunday.
EAST BOUND.
Ly Fitzgerald ........coocovovecceeeee. 8185 &m. 4:85 p. m,
Ar Dougla ... oo 9188 RoMC - D 244 D, M.
. Ar Wayer05e........................11:20 &, m, 7:30 p. m.
Ar 8rim5wick.......................t 1:50 p. m, .
SOUTH BOUND,
1v Bilegerald. . ... .....c.coh 8000 memm, 440 D, B 0
Ap Wiften .. -5 oo w4OB M 5:40 p. m.
: Ar Monlfrie. ... ... ... ..il:.1010 & m, 6:66 p. m.
Ar Thomasville ......ccweeevee..-....12:10 noon 8:10 p. m.
H. C. MCFADDEN, G. P. A. J. G. KnAPP, Comriercial Agent,
Waycross, Ga.. Fitzgerald, Gsa.
: J. N. NORRIS, Ticket Agent, Fitzgerald, Ga.
W
SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY
THROUGH SERVICE BETWEEN
Savannah, Helena, Abbeville, Cordele, Amerlcus, Albany and Montgomery.
e B BIE T s.e e - s e
Lv Savannah ..... 715 am| 430 pm g Lv Montgomery...| 7380 am |cceeeeeaan..
Ar He1ena..........] 1119 am| 835 pm Ar Richland ..... .1 11. 33 am.|..q. . .00
Lv Helena .........| 1124 am| 530 am § Lv Columbus ......| il6am | 215 pm
Ar Abbevllle ..... | 1220 pm| 630 sm Ar Richland .......| 11 31 am'| 3 456 pm
Lv Abbeville ......| 1220 pm| 680 am z Tv. Riehland ... ;.. :'ll°3B am |ooi. 00
Lv Oordel® -........| 155 pm| 740 am v [Ar AIBRDY ...l TR Pl s s
Lv Americus.......| 303 pm| 853 am —_— ef—
Ar Richland .......| 355 pm| 950 am Lv Richland .......| 11 32 am |365 pm
Ty Albany - ...| 215 pml .. AT Cordele. """ '1 40 bm | §4O pam
AR Richiend .l g% gl { |Ar Abbevilie ....7:| 862 pm | 820 pm
.esaxs]. 856 b pml 959 § Lv Abberville ...... 2
Lv Richland .......| 38 poy) 038 aml ¢ |47 Holema.o.ioro| 500 bm |O% bm
Lv Richland ......| 355 pmjieececs. .. Lv He1ena..........| 350 pm |6OO am
Ar Montgomery...| 745 pmf......eceee. Ar Savannah......| 800 pm 1000 am
; : | :
FITZGERALD DIVISION.
STATION. |A‘M‘PM‘AM‘PM§ | STATICON. lAM{PM‘AMIPM
Lv. X A | Lv. 7 F
Abbeville . ....|t7 00 {3 15 [*7 30 *3 156 | Ocilia ...... ....[*o 15 [+4 55 |* 0 00}* 4 40
Cortez ...... ....|. 710 (327 | 7401325 ’ Whitley ..... ..[ 927 1505 910{ 449
Brownlnf sses 7151833374518 39 Fitzgerald . ....;1 945 (525 | 925 503
Forest Glen ....| 725|343 | 7585338 | Queensland ....[lOO5 | 545 | 940| 514
Carswell ........| 730 | 347 | 759342 | Bowen's Mill ..[lO 30 | 6 65| 948 527
Bowen’s Mi11...| 735|352 | 803|347 Carswell .....1087 1 gl2| 953 532
Queensland ... | 745 | 4 05| 810|400 Forest G1en....(10 44 | 6 17| 956 586
Fitzgerald ....:.| SOO | 420 | 828 |4 11 Browning .....[llO2 | 635 110 05] 545
Whitiey ........| 830 |432 ’ 837 | 423 Cortez ..........[lllO |640 [ 10 10] 540
Ocilla ..... .....| 900 | 445|845 435 Abbeviile ......|ll 30 |7OO | 10 20] Bco
Arv | | Arv { f
+ Daily except Sundcay. * Sunday only.
}C. B. RYAN, G' Po A', Cl F- STEWART’ Ao G’. P- A-,
b Portsmouth, Va, Savannab, Ga
| J. B, CRAWFORD, Agent, Fitigerald, :