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By BEERE :
1l haal
SUSIFIED AD3
T WANTED %
PANCY DRESSMAKING—See Mrs,
Lieona Sutton, 315 E. Magnolia St.
Prices reasonable. di6p
e e e e Bl SR
WANTED—Salesmen for line of
guaranteed tires. Guaranteed salary
with $lOO per week, extra commis
sions. o
COWAN TIRE AND RUBBER CO.
Chicago, 111, Box 784.
YOUNG MAN wishes position in Dry
Goods or Department Store as Show
Card Writer, can furnish references.
address X Y Z Leader-Enterprise and
ineas : mtwp
;wSR‘NTED—WiII buy any quantity of
’?i-yers,» Hens, Roosters, Turkeys,
Geese, Ducks, Guinaes delivered, Cas
per Hide & Skin Co. Phone 306, tf
. FOR SALE ;
FOR SALE—Easter Lily Bulbs; 302
‘W. Cypress St. d4p
ettt e e o S o e
FOR SALE—We buy and sell auto
parts for all make cars. Sell us your
scrap automobiles and saw mill ma
chinery. CASPER Hide & Skin Co.,
Phone 306, tf
FOR SALE—Furniture and house
hold goods of small apartment. Wiil
exchange piano for automobile. Suite
5, Davis Bid. 107Y4 W. Central. mtwp
FOR SALE—CoIe planter and distri
butor combined at a bargain, for
cash, ,'See J. E. Wilson, RF.D. 5,
Fitzgerald, didp
fiq@———-—-——-—————-—-——-—-
FOR SALE—Settings of Minorca
eggs, guaranteed fertile, $2.00 per set
ting. Also registered cockerels, Phone
547 or call at 512 W. Ohoopee. d2sp
| S ————————————
CORD WOOD-—For 4ft. Cord wood
and prompt delivery, phone 227, tf.
FOR SALE—Rhode Island Red
Chickens and eggs. Sam Willcox,
405 South G’rant Streat. tf
FOR SALE OR’ RENT—IO room
heuse in first class shape and ten
acres, just outside of city. For par
ticulars see A. G. BROWN, 406 W.
Orange St. . ; tf
FOR.SALE ~One Four Passenger,
1920 Model Apperson back Rabbit
fintompble, in good condition. Will
exchange for diamond or improved
city property. J. C. Bush, tf
e "FOR RENT
FOR RENT—Three furnished bed
rooms; also light housekeeping rooms,
315 East Magnolia St. dl6p
S ——————
FOR RENT-—Furnished housekeep
‘ing rooms, also unfurnished rooms
for rent. Phone 341. - dl7
‘ FOUND
*m—-———.—. st e
FOR SALE—Ford Touring Car, Self
Starter, 1920, almost new. HAILE'S
DRUG STORE. - dl4
OO ITITIEL,
'GREEK-AMERICAN. LUNCH
i : ' ROOM
L Headquarters for r
FRESH FISH and QYSTERS,
CALIFORNIA FRUITS Of
¢\ 'ALLKINDS .
224, E, Pine St., " Phone 113.
. We make Old
Furniture New
. OUR SPECIALTY!
Merllgli Furniture Co.,
Sl A q‘e 49
fim YOUR WOOD ORDERS
‘«m 'WOOD YARDS
- 708 Bast Oconee Street
' TRUCK DELIVERY!
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED!
I 1 T
BTN 0 zen
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‘s‘6\‘“*’s‘ o o "nji" - '
o Ml & r
LRV RSN .
~~fv‘~sf£°‘§;~£7§;f a 0
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‘?}y« g}‘_lri’y’;{‘?k 7 ol o F e
Lalie BRI e
2 e gt Rt - ,a. ;
, Biext door to the
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B A M - “&% ko 3 3
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Announcements a 1
. -
For City Offices
Sl |
' FOR MAYOR
To the Citizens of Fitzgerald: |
Recognizing the importance of the
changes made through the addition
of the Women voters for the election
of officers of the city, and appreci
ating fully their laudable gm to help
to make Fitzgerald a bigger and better
city in conjunction with the former
voters of the city, I have consented to
become a.candidate for Mayor at the
solicitation: of numerous friends
among the men and women of the city.
who have the wellfare of the commun
ity at heart.
Should the voters hemor me with
this office, it shall be my purpose to
administer the affairs of the city in the
interest .of all of the people, without
prejudice or favor, to the end that
the moral and material welfare of the
city may be properly advanced with
due regard to the tax burden from
which the tax-payers are entitled to
reasonable relief. It shall be my aim
to enforce rigidly all ordinances lead
ing to a higher morality and to the pro
tection of life and property.
Assuring you of my fullest appre
ciation of your careful consideration
of my candidacy, I am,,
: Drew W. Paulk.
FOR ALDERMAN AT LARGE
At the solicitation of many friends
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for re-election as Alderman at
Large, subject to the choice of the
voters at the coming primary.
GEO. L. 'KILCREASE.
FOR ALDERMAN AT LARGE
After careful consideration I here
by announce my candidacy for Alder
man at Large, subject to the prim
ary to be called by the executive com
mittee.
E. J. DORMINEY.
FOR ALDERMAN AT LARGE
At the request of a large number of
citizens, I hereby announce for Alder
man at Large. If elected I shall
serve the city to the best of mfi abil
ity. \
CLAYTON JAY.
FOR CITY TREASURER
To the Voters of litzgeraid: ;
I respectfully announce my candi
dacy for re-election to the office of
Treasurer of the city of Fitzgerald,
subject to your approval in the com
ing primary. :
G. P. MINGLEDOREF.
FOR ALDERMAN AT LARGE
After conferring with my friends I
have decided to be a candidate for
Alderman at Large in the coming
primary to be held for the election
of city officers and will appreciate the
support of all the voters, l
A. H THURMOND.
FOR WATER, LIGHT E BOND
COMMISSION |
To the Voters of Fitzgerald: .
I, hereby respectfully announce my.
candidacy for re-clection as member
of the ‘Water, Light and Bond Com
mission, subject to vhe coming city
primary, and pledge my continued
best efforts on behalf of the city if
returned to office.
G. E. RICKER.
FOR WATER LIGHT AND BOND
COMMISSION
At the urgent request of many of
my friends I hereby announce my
candidacy for the Water, Light and
Bond Commission of the city of
Fitzgerald, subject to the coming
primary. If elected I pledge by best
attention to the ‘city's business in
this office.
: HUBERT ROUSH.
FOR ALDERMAN AT LARGE
My friends having requested that
I be a candidate in the coming prim
ary for re-election as Alderman at
'Large, I hereby announce myself a
candidate and will appreciate the
support of the voters. ;
Cupld's “Shafe®
A heneymoon down a coal-pit sounds
& bit welrd and dark; but that, st
least, was the first trip made by
bride and bridegroom after the chureh
Ceremony. The hridegroom was a
coal-pit manager, and his hew wife
MWMdownneou-plt.or
even seep oOne, till the wedding day.
At her own request they went from
the church, donned suitable attire,
Stepped into the cage, and were taken
to the bottom of the shaft, where
they had a rousing reception from
miners armed with plek and shovel,
M,mam
Musicians find the drum an unsaps
isfactory Instrument for lack of han
description ‘of a drum parch
ment head of which is loaded with
an adherent composition containing
finely divided iron. Such composition
Bes in a central circle. Around the
©dge a second ring-shaped membrane
s secured and the effect of the load
ing 18 o produce good harmonic over
tones. s .
At the far top of the kiln (at the
famous pottery works of King Techel,
China), and in the chimney are holes
& foot square, into which & man, who
acts as a human thermometer, looks to
determine the heat. His method is
#imple, - He spits into the hole, and if
/Ahe spit turos to steam, the tempere
ee i e v e
L D G ARt GE%E . . ’
S 00
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1921.
' Mrs. ALICE GRESHAM DODD,
mother "of first American soldier
{ killed in France, who gives entire |
. credit for recovery of her health |
| to the well-known medicine, Tan
| lac. %
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THIA G OA R
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The following remarkable state
ment was made recently by Mrs,
Alice Gresham Dodd, the mother of
Corporal “Jas. B. Gresham, who was
the first American soldier killed in
France. The statement was made at
the Gresham Memorial Home, which
‘was presented to her by the patriotic
people of Indiana as an evidence of
their appreciation of the services
rendered to his country by her son,
The shock of her son’s death re
sulted in a serious breakdown in Mrs.
Dodd’s health, but every one will
learn with interest and: pleasure that
she is now in splendid health again.
Mrs. Dodd gives the entire credit for
her recovery to the celebrated ‘medi
cine, Tanlac.
She said: “After my dear boy’s
death T had a general breakdown in
health. At first it was just indiges
tion. My food would upset me and
I had to diet myself very carefully.
I also had rheumatism with severe
pains in my shoulders, back and arms
and at times 1 would suffer greatly,
and my joints would become swollen
and stiff. 1 was hardly able to do
but very little about the.house and
at.times could not even cook a meal.
I became very nervous and restlesg
and at night would lie awake for
hours. ! ¥
“A friend of mine advised me to
try Tanlac. I am glad I did, for it
proved to be the best medicine I
have ever, taken. It soon gave me a
splendid appetite and relieved me en
tirely of indigestion. * My rheumatism
‘also disappeared and I am now able
to do my housework with the great
est ease. My iicrves arc steady and
strong. I sleep at night "and my
health is better. than in years. I shall
always be grateful for what Tanlac
has done for me.” ;
Tanlac is sold in Fitzgerald by T.
J. Haile. and Company.
: Advertisement.
Advertised goods are good goods.
Advertisers can't afford to misrepre
sent. !
Home Furniture Co.,
- Tuesday & Wednesday
March 16th-17th
9x12 Grass Rugs $12)9
value only -
$6.95
'52.50 Aluminunr 6 cup
Percolators only
. $1.69 .
S —————
$l.OO Rubber Door Mats
. Special at w
- 350 cents
$2O I;'(;n Beds, any color,
il §12.45
‘ o . i
- . Liberty’s Aid to Genlus,
Persons of 'genius, it is true, are,
and arc always likely to be, a small
‘minority; but in order to have them
it is necespary to preserve the soil in
which they grow. Genius can only
breathe freely in an atmosphere of
freedom. Persons of genius are less
capable of fitting themselves without
hurtful compression into any one of
the small number of molds which so
ciety provides in order to save its
members the trouble of forming their
own character. If from timidity they
consent to be forced into one of these
molds, and to let that part of them
selves which cannot expand under the
pressurz remaln unexpanded, ,soclgt!
will be little the better for their fin
lus. If they are of a strong character
and, break their fetters they become
a mark for the society which has not
succeeded in reducing them. to the com
monpiace, to point at with solems
warning as wild and erratic and the
like; much as if one should complain
of the Niagara river for not flowing
smoothly between its banks itke a
Dutch canal.—John Stuart Mill, *
‘- The Moqui Desert. °
Never was life so lonely and cheer
less as in the desolate hovels of the
Moquis. Their land 18 not a tender
solitude, but a forbidding desolat®n of
escarped cliffs, overlooking wastes of
sand, where the winds wage war or
the small shrubs and venturesome
grasses, leaving to the drouth such as
théy cannot uproot. A few scrubby
trees, spotting the edge of the plain as
if they had looked across the waterless
waste and crouched in fear, furnish
a little brushwood for the fires of the
Moquis who are fighting out the battle
of existence that is hardly worth the
struggle. The seven villages within a
circuit of ten miles have been isolated
from the world through centuries, yet
they have so little intercourse with
each other that their tribal langunages,
everywhere subject to swift mutations,
are entirely unlike—~Susan Arnold
Wallace. 33
| _ Origin of Sundae Disputed.
A druggist says that the origin of
I the word “sundae” has been under dis
cussion in drug trade papers for years
iHe says that several years ago the
Druggists’ Circular made the follow
l ing statement in reference to the word
after citing various accounts from jour
l nals of the word’s origin: “All these
explanations,” it says, “cannot be true.
' Since all but one must be false, it
~may be that they all are.”” Among
;the explanations given is that a Mr.
Sundae of New Orleans was the orig
inator of this delicious concoction.
Another well-known theory is that Sun
dae is a corruption of Sunday, and
that the confection was so called be
cause it was originally a specialty on
‘' Sundays of many drug stores in places
where confectioners were closed omn
% that day. '
" When Hanging a Picture,
One important consideration before
hanging a picture is its shape and
gize in relation to the area of the
' wall on which it is to be placed. A
fine adjustment of areas and rec
tangles is very necessary to achieve a
satisfactory result. I recall a room
in which a small wall space was liter
ally cevered by a large portrait, and
on a large yvnll space of the adjoining
wall were hung four small pictures
arranged on a diagonal line like a
flight of stairs—the effect was very
disturbing, It would have been so
easy to have arranged the walls
properly by putting the portrait on
the larger wall space, one of the four
small pictures on the smaller wall,
and the other three—in the closet.—
Exchange. o
i
! 35-cent bottle of “Danderine” wiil
not only rid your scalp of destructivel
~dandruff and stop falling hair, but im
‘mediately your hair seems twice as
abundant and so wondrous glossy.
‘Let . “Danderine” save your hair.
'Have lots of long, heavy hair, radi
lant with life and beauty.—Adv.
| ' CITY NEWS 1
l’ Mrs. J.,D. Seagraves and children
and friends made a visit out to her
lmother's‘, Mrs. Betsy Branch. B
Mr. Carl Paulk of the Frank sec
tion was in town Saturday on business,
- = Fitzgerald is some busy place since
‘the A. B, and A. shut down.
We were glad to see so many out
at the Curb Market. That is the place
to go to get what you want to eat at
low prices. » ;
Messrs Felic and Russell Branch of
Mystic was in town yesterday.
The dew Bowen building corner
'Main and Central Avenues adds a
‘good attraction to Fitzgtrald.
The people on Grant Street are im
proving up South Grant very much. |
Miss Lee Gierson who has been
~with Miss AliceFussell at her lovely
home on North Lee Street. :
Miss Louise Clements and Miss Sad
ie Hunter of Irwinville were in town.
Saturday.
Mr. Homer Walter Wade made a
business trip to Atlanta last week.
Mr. C. L. Garwood returned from
his regular trip to Norman Park Sat
urday.
Misses Annie Dowling and Jack
Goodyear made a visit to Osierfield
last week.
We are glad to see Mr. D. K. Nation
out ‘again after a long illness. :
There are lots of nice homes going
up in Fitzgerald that look good to us.
“Shorty.”
—and the weather is hot, and you don’t .want
your milk to sour, or you vegetables to wilt, or
a dozen things to eat to spoil, you want to be
sure that your refrigerator is oneyou <an trust.
;I Kr'_‘——\ \.“ | \
~ Get “The Daddy of
Them All”
---There are refrigerators and refrigerators.
Some of them hold ice and food; some of them
do little else. The Eddy Refrigerator, whose
first model was built in 1847, conserves ice
and preserves whatever is entrusted toits care.
Good R efrigeration
Is Economy |
To keep food as it ought to be kept,
~~ to makeit go farther and taste better,
to preserve it with least waste, in the
. mmost wholesome way, with absolute
safety, economy, and perfection of
__ refrigeration, the sure solution is ‘the
~ Eddy Refrigerator.
We have some new models in stock,
- which are real beauties and we *
would like to show them to you.
_ Call and Jook them over.
Camea the Remgm;—pgegstfida mgproved bg the
Johnson Hardware
~ Company
Fast Pine Street - -mmer?ld,(}a,
‘LADY DRUGGISTS = e
sl ADVICE TAKEN
1 : 5 ‘ Dy
“My sister-in-law is a druggist.
She told me of several bad stomach
and liver cases which were bene
fitted by taking Mayr’s Wonderful
Remedy and advised me to try it. I
had numerous bad attacks due to
bloaing and had almost constant pain
in my stomach before. getting your
remedy. - I am feeling fine now.” It
is a simple, harmless preparation that
removes the catarrhal mucus from the
intestinal tract and allays the inflam
mation which causes practically all
'stomach, liver and intestinal ailments,
including appendicitis. One dose will
convince or money refunded —Mec-
Lemore and National Drug Compan
ies and druggists everywhere—Ad
vertisement.
. Mescpotamia’s Old Glories.
Nebuchadnezzar’s vast firvigation
system, which once watered all Baby
lonia, can still .be easily traced for
miles about Bagdad. One glant canal,
the Narawan, runs parallel with the
Tigris for nearly 800 miles; it is 350
feet wide, and all about it the takeoff
and laterals may still be identified.
Herodotus sald he found a “forest of
verdure from end to end” when he vis
fted Mesopotamia.—National Geo»
graphic Soclety Bulletin.
- gl 7S o
‘Manon’s Candy Kitchen
We invite our Railroad friends to make our store
their headquarters. Cool and comfortable.
Bottled Drinks on Ice and First Class Fountain
Service. - g ‘ ‘
- Fruits and Candies.
Oranges 3¢ dozen.
Manen Candy Kitchen
S 106 East Pine Street
Phone 359
For Better Than Average '
Altering, '
Dry Cleaning,
Dyeil!gQ ‘
Pressing,
Tailoring, s
We are equipped to do quu'rj
Work That will last long.
THREE-FIVE-NINE
Pressing Club
Ww. RQY BRAGG, Proprietor
H. A. Mathis
' OPTOMETRIST and |
‘ MFG. OPTICIAN :
Eyes examined, Glasses furnished.
Broken Leny Duplicated
We Grind Our Own Glasses,® =