Newspaper Page Text
The Fitzgerald Leader
ENTERPRISE AND PRESS
Published Daily, Tri-Weekly—Mon
day, Wednesday, and Friday of each
week by
THE LEADER PUBLISHING CO.
Isidor Gelders ........... ...Editor
S, M. Gelders ...........Man’g. Ed.
—Official Organ City of Fitzgerald—
Entered at the Post Office at Fitzger
ald as Second Class Mail Matter
Under Act of Congress,
March 18, 1897,
~ Subscription Price—Daily
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Rates for display advertising fur
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10 cents per line for each insertion. |
No ad taken for less than 30 cents. |
B s Sepretanave T |
SOMETHING WRONG— (from
~Cordele Dispatch) lien [lill mun—f
ty closes her rural school for !h}'i
spring term this week. This is
‘one of the poorest news rvpurls{
that will come out of that county
during the whole year. It is all
tragedy to suppose in these few
weceks the boys and girls of the
~homes in the rural sections of
that or any other Georgian coun
ty can have what they nced in
school work for the early half of
the year.
And Ben Hill is not the only
county in this condition. Six
months will not do for the rural
boy and girl in school. Seven will
not do. Eight will not do if the
the boys and girls in the city
schools of the state get nine—
and they do.
This state has delved into its
treasury for a common school
fund till it is almost bankrupt and
still we have no rural schools.
Running expenses depend almost
wholly in most counties on this
common school fund. People
who should see that the state fund
is well spent—who should see
that it is augmented by local tax
ation for good schools, are off the
job attending to other hings.
There are fully thirty counties
in Georgia that draw more moncy
for their schools out of the state
treasury than they pay in from
all sources. This is in itself all
wrong. Four and a half million
dollars must be raised from <lah'l
revenues this year for the com
mon schools—and here are the
rural - schools already closing
when they should be just getting
headway. Something is wrong. |
We need rural schools |y cvery
county well organized and finan
ced with people behind them who
will see that graded schools are
operated in line with the city |
schools just as long as the schools
run in the best systems. We
need relief in the state treasury
in the cutting of :lpprnlvri.‘lli-m:l
and the equalization of taxes., |
We need relief from this un
heard of amount of money thrown
away on a common school sys
tem that does not provide hut for |
four to six months in the year. |
We need a state appropriation |
that the state can payv-—and mm!
we need local school support that |
will mean rural schools like those |
in the bost city systems | ’
We have fu!‘;;u(tpn the \(lu...l‘\f‘
for politics and moonshine liquor, |
We have permitted the Reds to
take hold of everyvthing and put
out the schools their interests|
and all other progressive move- |
ments—the county agents, the
dipping vats and the stock rais
ing and stock saving work. We
have quit the normally c«»nstruwi
tive plans and have gone to tear
ing down.
All this must be stopped some
where. Each county in Georgia
must be held responsible for the
schools within its boundaries.
The more money the state treas.
ury pours out to the long faced
spielers for our dear children in
the rural sections. the less the
school term they have. It is
wrong—wrong in the very foun
dation of the system somewhere.
The day must come when ey ery
- child has a fair showing in school
before we can hope for advance
ment of substantial character.
It destroys the hopes of the man
with real interest when he thinks
of the millions Georgia is pouring
out of its state treasury into the
common school fund and has to
face a news item saying that the
rural schools are being closed
‘early in the year. Something is
wrong. .
ot
INSPECTION OF PREMISES
By virtue of ordinance 337 a regular
; tion of all premises in the city
will begin to be made Apri! 15th and
¥ all property owners are requested to
- have their premises in sanitary condi
% to avoid cases being made
- against them.
k- W. C. WILKERSON,
R Chief of Fire Department,
(Continued from Page 1)
b e
“Well,” T said “I will show you how
it works. When I get well, which [
am going to do, I will be the wellest
man in this whole mission,” “Abso
lutely hopeless. Have you written
our will?” and out the door he went.
That same man let me out of the bed
'in one half the time he said he would,
in six weeks caught me eating a whole
ilenmn pie that I had stole out of the
| hospital dining room, three months
ilatc‘r he declared me the wellest man
}h(- knew anything about. You sce
{ that’s what I got in Fitz. I absorhed
{it while I was there. It will work,
| That reminds me of one that I re
gmrmln»r from the Fitz days. Don't
!I\'nu\\ whether any of you remember
| old Robert Merritt that got killed
édnwn there about Ambrose or not.
Any how Bob came into the Lumber
office one afternoon, and speke to
]'l'rnn Dickey. “Captain Tom, I is been
E:u-mng timber for this Lon Dickey |
Lumber Company a many a day.”
“Yes Robert,” replied Uncle Tom, “I
have walked through these Cypress
swamps and water till | have got
webs between my toes like a duck.”
Uncle Tom got very serious. “Robert
I cannot let you have this moncy.
You just want to get drunk.” ‘Correct
said Robert, “and when I do there
won't he a drunker man in this coun
ty than I am.” Bob had the l"ilzuur-i
ald spirit—as well as Pine street Spir
its. |
I am writing too long a letter, I\l
will end this one and send some nmro!
a lttle later, But I must mcm‘uni
one other point of the Fitzgerald spir
it, You have the finest town in the |
World to help a young man make |
good if he has anything in him. I
told Mrs. Taylor the other night, "I
wish T could rear all my three hoys
in old Fitzgerald,” “Why -that statc
ment here 12,000 miles from Ftzoer- |
ald,” “Because”, T repled, “If they
had anything in the world in them
that was £ood they would get cevery
chance in Fitzgerald to succeed.” [
will close this as point number two.
Fitzgerald Spirit believes in her young |
men, and gives them an opportunity
in business, school, and everything
clse. I once knew a town where the
Board of Education had a rule that
no boy or girl reared in the town
could teach in the public schools—
they need not apply. Most. of. them
moved away, :
Well, T will give you more bosh
than your joke column carried ahout
the A, B. & A, if I don't quit. I will
send some more some time or other,
If you publish any of this send me a
copy of the paper, [ want to sce
how long this looks when it gets in
print so | can guage the next letter,
Tell everybody who can, to write to
us We love vou all whether we
have met you or not. I remain,
Sincerely,
: L O TAYLOR,
“COMBINE TO SMASH UNION"
e b e |
President of Amalgamated Clothing
Workers Makes Charges Against |
“Clique” of Manufactureis, =~
i~ e |
Sidoey Hillman, president of the |
Amalgamated Clothing Workers, '.:u\'oj
out a statement at New York reiterat- |
ing that an agreement was made with |
the Clothing Manufacturers' associa- |
tion ten days before the present trou- |
ble between the two organizations e |
gan. By their “lockout,” Mr. ll;ilm:m!
said, the emplovers broke this agree- |
went, |
Mi, Hillman gave out a copy of u;
memorandum of a conferenee which he i
held on November 14 with the sub-|
committee of the manuracturers, ’l‘lwi
result of this conference, Mr. llillm:lu;
charged, later was repudiated by *H
small clique of manufacturers, whe |
were out for war and wanted sinu.i_v;
to smash the Amalgamated.” ‘
Women in Railroad Service,
The highest point in the employment
of women by the railroads in the Uni- |
ted States was reached in October, !
1018, when there were 101,780 em
ployed by first-class roads, an increase
of 66 per cent in the first nine months
of 1018, and of 225 per cent from the |
beginning of the war. Although this |
number has decreased since that time, |
there are still many more employed |
than before the war. There ave two |
causes which have operated to hl‘ill!—"}
about the reduction in the number of |
women employees: First, the return of
soldiers and sailors, who were rein
stated according to senjority, and, see
ond, the general n‘dm'tlon\ in labor
force on the railroads caused by the
necessity for economy and which re
sulted in women being laid off in many
cases because of their lower seniority
rights, Recently, however, there has
again been a slight increase in the
number of women employed.
She Settled Matters.
One day at school the subject of
slass president was brought up and
the suggestion thar we vote on it. 1
wus not particularty fond of any of
Je girls. 8o to settle matters.l voted
for myself. never thinking that 1
would be found out. When the votes
were read out In front of the class it
was found that every one in the class
bad voted for me They all knew |
had voted for myself.—~Chicago Trib
ane.
Altogether a Busy Famlly,
“What fs the Higgins' family doing
aow?" asked Mrs. Jones, of her neigh
bor. "The wife is writing poems that
nobody will read, the daughter is paint.
ing pictures that nobody will buy, the
son i{s writing plays that nobody will
put on the stage, and the husband is
writing checks that nobody will cash,”
was the startling reply.
Sticking,
Little Harry, not having taken his
customary afternoor nap, and feeling
sleepy along toward night suid to his
father: “Papa. you will have to make
me a pew eye, this one keeps stick
ing. -
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1921,
‘DEAD’ MAN SPOKE
And Negro Bearers Hyrriedly
Abandoned Litter.
Incident Would Have Shaken the
Nerve of Men Far Less Supersti
tious Than the Dusky Soldiers.
I feel sure we are all pretty well
agreed as to the genuine bravery dis
played by Uncie Sam’s brunettes in
action! The little incident which I
am about to relate will not, I hope,
detract very much from the above
statement, Louise M. Riis writes in
the Stars and Stripes.
It happened on a dismal, rainy
night; just such' a night, in fact, as
you all doubtless remewmber, when our
C. O. usually elected to rearrange the
classes of patients who were confined
to bed in the various wards. A mug
£y, sloppy, wettish sort of night, when
the bravest sort of chap hesitated to
venture out with oilskins and hip boots.
So paturally we were not greatly sur
prised when the order came to trans
fer a few of the flu cases to the ward
opened on the opposite side of the
camp. All such cases were kept at
the extreme end of the ward, divided
from the rest of the patients by sheets
which formed a screen bhetween the
beds.
One of my patients had answered
the “Final Roll Call” a few minutes
before the order came for the general
night moving to begin, and I had sent
for the litter bearers to remove him
to the morgue. We were a bit short
of help at this particular time of the
night, and two negroes among the con
valescent patients had been‘pressed
into service. When they arrived on
the scene, being rather busy making
out cards in the office, I instructed
them to first remove the corpse at the
far end of the ward.
Just across from this bed was the
one occupied by a flu case, a lanky
chap from Kansas, whose drawling
voice was easily recognizable, and
whose whining notes had earned him
the sobriquet of “Kain Sass.” By
some mistake the darkies loaded him
on to the litter which was destined for
the morgue, and Kansas, being by that
time used to being lifted about, made
no demur, until the procession arrived
at the far end of the ward, on the
way outside, when he suddenly
drawled, “Ain’t this a h—l of a night
to take a man out!”
I have been told that a negro be
comes an ashen color when fright
ened; I can’t say just how these par
ticular chaps looked. I only know 1
listened to the most unearthly howls
or groans that even a negro ever in
dulged in; that a litter wag dropped
to the floor with almost surprising
suddenness; that two dark clouds flew
by me, out into the night, flinging wide
the door, overturning the O. D.’s lan
tern in thelr wild rush, and that a
drawling voice was whining for some
body to pull “them covers over my
head again.” :‘
Shipbuilding Is Intricate Art. |
"The construction of a great ship;
requires more separate arts and trades |
than any other object made by man,” |
sald Admiral D, W, Taylor, chief ofi
the bureau of construction of the Unit- |
ed States navy department in a recent :
meeting of the Royal Ontario lnsti-§
tute. P o s -
Among the actual branches of s«-l-l
ence which enter into shipbuilding the |
oldest is astronomy, which is still of |
great importance to navigators. Ra- |
dio apparatus is peeuliarly an ndvlm-i
tage to the navy. Mathematics is an |
essential, of course, to all the other |
sciences. Mathematieal apparatus for |
range finding, he stated, is mnployml.%
which determine ins!:m;l,v problems |
containing as many as half a dozvni
variables, |
Chemistry and physies contribute |
In a great measure to the ('mnplo!e!
battleship, the branch of opties alone |
having given many advantages. In |
the matter of electrieal science the |
scope to which it is used on the bat- |
tleship may be appreciated by the |
fact that the average large warship |
cean generate 180060 horse power of |
eleetrical energy, which is equivalent |
to the amount used for a fairly large |
city. '
e i |
Itigenious Planting Device. |
By the ingenious application of a |
discarded two-eylinder opposed motor- |
eyele cngine, a New York farmer has |
devtsed a celery-transplanting ma- |
chine, says Popular Mechanies Magn
zine, that automatically sets the |
plants while propelling itself, The |
motor, hung between the front wheels, |
transmits its power to them, and also
operates two endless belts, While one
man guides the machine, two others
at the back place the small plants on
marks on one of the belts, as it ecross
es a feed table. The other lwh holds
them in position, roots forward, until
they enter a furrow made by a small
plow on the machine, and two follow
ing disks then turn the earth back
around the roots.
Analysis of Suicide Siatistics.
In 46 cases of suicide analyzed by
Lowrey in the Journal of Mental and
Nervous Diseases, 16 were cases of de
mentia praecox, 9 of maniac depressive
| insanity, 5 of psychopathic presenility,
’3 of psychoneurssis and the others
seattered. In 14 cases the attempt
| was due to depression; in 7 to hallu
cinations or delusions; in 6 to escape
persecution: in 7 to escape physieal
suffering or dread of mental disease.
|'l‘ho methods used most often were
- cutting, gas and poison.
Curious Masterpieces. .
Literary masterpieces have heen
written on strange mediums Smart's
poem. “Song to David,"” was written
with a key on the walls of a mad
house. Coleridge once wrote a sone
net on a scrap of seaweed.
' Explaining His Name,
Jack, whose maternal grandmother
had been married three thines on he
ing asked for whow he was nnmed.
isal(l: “Why, I was nuwed afier moth
er's first father.” &
THE SUIT CASES
I@).vaZVL vt:y McClure N;:-wéx;ap—;r Syndlcate.)
Bessie flung an old waist on the lit
tle pile of cast-off clothing in the open
suit case, jamined the bunch down
savagely, snapped the cover shut and
indulgzed in a discontented monologue
while she tested the weight of it.
“I may be foolish; I probably am,
but I don’t care, I'm going to have
one day off and go somewhere—like
other folks. You're not heavy enough”
—to the rather battered suit case—
“l want you to feel as if 1 were going
somewhere for a month’s vacation.”
She put the case down again and
threw in an old sofa pillow. Bessie
was doing her packing in the attic
She continued the one-sided argument:
“I don’t care! Fay and Laura go
to places and have pretty clothes and
meet nice people,” punching the pil
low viciously, “and I stay home and
cook and scrub for them”—more punch
ing—*“and get found fault with if
I scorch the biscuits or get too much
starch in their white waists—and ev
erything! I'm going for an outingi
and make helieve it's a vacation at|
the seashore or some place. Fay and
Laura can get their own dinner for
once.” ‘
Unconsciously Bessie was stating a
deplorable fact that had long been @
subject of heated discussion among
the neighbors.
“Why did Bessie—sweet little Bes
sie—drudge for her frivolous and
thoughtless sisters and receive hardly
a kind word of thanks? Why dldn’l‘
she rehel?” |
And now Bessie had rebelled—a sort
of mild little rebellion, truly—but i 1
might lead to better things.
Thoughtful and kind-hearted, even
in a state of rebellion, Bessie left :
note for her sisters telling them there
was plenty of food cooked and assur
ing .them she would be home that eve
ning. Not a word of discontent ap
peared in the note.
Then, with a whimsical little smile |
she labelled her suit case with hmi
name and address and took her scanty
savings from the jar in the kitcher
cabinet. When counted the grand to
tal was one dollar and seventy-three
cents, 3
With another little smile she pock
eted the money, picked up her sui’
case and took a suburban car for
“The Lake.’
She spent one delightful day watch
ing the motor boats and listening tc
the gentle lapping of the little waves
then at dusk boarded the car fo
home,
The only vacant seat was near the
rear door and Bessie placed her sul
case in the space between her sea
and the next and prepared to enjo;
the ride across country,
At a stop beside the highway ¢
voung man swung aboard with a suit
case, very much like Bessie's and i 1
a very pleasant voice—Bessie though
it very, very pleasant—asked the con
ductor il he could make the 9:15 trait
West, Being assured that he coule
the voung man dropped his suit case
beside Bessie's and hung to a strap.
“Car broke down,” she heard hin
tell the conductor—*take the chauffeu
an hour l«;‘_fix it and I've got to maki
that train” )
Bossie furtively watched and ad
mired him during the short journey t
town and when he seized the sui
case and rushed for the train, whiel
was already in when they arrived
she hreathed a sigh of regret.
Tired, but happy, she trudged home
ward, to answer the questions of her
amazed and indignant sisters. and s
iog to what _roprn:,u;lms might be
thrown in for seasoning. : l
The suit case reposed in the attic
unopened, and Bessie lay a long tim¢
and thought of her wonderful day. -
“1 don't care.” she finally murmurec
sleepily. “It was a great way to breal
the monotony.”
One month later the door bell rang
and there stood the pleasant-looking
voung man with Bessie's suit cnse‘
There was nothing for poor, confuse(
Bessie to do but invite him in whil
she resurrected his own case from the
attie, and that gave her time to re
gain some of her lost composure and
realize that she must explain the sof:
piliow and cast-off clothing.
tlis hearty laughter put her more
at ease and he stayved a few milnno:
chatting. . -
‘lt was my own fault,” he saic
while taking his leave, “but it really
caused me a lot of trouble and 1 thin}
vou owe me something, I'm coming
around with my roadster this evenin:
and take you for a ride in the fresl
air, Will you go?"
Bessie would—and did. Not onb
that evening, but many others as well
Then one day the young man tolc
Bessie's sisters they would have tq
“look for another housekeeper as he
had spoken for Bessie himself,
Now DBessie doesn't have to make
believe and that old suit case is stil
packed with old clothes and a sof:
pillow, Fred tells his wife he wouldn’,
throw it away for the world, for i
also helped “to break the monotony’
for him.
Just Shopping.
“Yes,” 1 can fix you up for Cali
fornia all right,” said the ticket agen
after spending an hour looking uj
berths and timetables,
“How nice!”
“When are you going?”
“Some day when | can afford it
replied the lady. “Thank you s¢
sl U-~Louisville Courier-Journal,
A
Long Thumb—Strong Will.
If the top joint of your thumb is
long. it shows that you have good will
power, Well-developed reasoning fac
ulties are possessed by those people
who have thumbs the second joints of
which are long. Thumbs that work
easily are owned by careless, happy
go-lucky, spendthrift individuals. A
stiff, firm-jointed thumb, however,
ghows thst the person is keen, tact
ful, self-possessed, and cautious—-the
sort of mau who will get on in the
world.
{
‘Road Bonds Voted
In Wilcox County
Good Road Bond Issue Election Is
Carried by a Small Margin
| CABBEVILEE, April 14 :Th 2
lb(fi]d election held in the county,
yesterday bonds were voted by the
small margin of about seventy-five
to cighty-five votes. It required about
650 votes to carry the election and‘
there was 702 votes in favor of bonds
and 262 against bonds.
| One feature of the eclection is the
iso]id vot¢ that was given the bonds
|in the Abbeville and Rochelle dis
]T(’i(:ls. Abbeville vote. was 324 in
| favor of borMs and 3 against bonds.
'l\’nchc?lc vote was 198 in {favor of
bonds, 28 against bonds. Both Pitts
Iun(l Seville voted against the bond
issue. The amount of the bonds to
hw issued will be $lOO,OOO. The bonds
Lare for good roads.
OFFICIAL BALLOT
CITY PRIMARY, APRIL 18, 1921}
FOR MAYOR
(Vote for One)
L, . GRINER
DREW W. PAULK
I'OR ALDERMEN
(Vote for Five)
E. J. DORMINEY
CEAYTON JTAY
G. L. KILEREASE
Wi R PAUEK
A. H . THURMOND
CLINE L. WARE
HOMER WATERS
FOR TREASURER
G. P. MINGLEDORF
FOR MEMBER WATER, LIGHT
& BOND COMMISSION
H. E. ROUSH
IFCR PRESIDENT BOARD OF
EDUCATION
DR. W. D, DORMINY :
FOR MEMBER SCHOOL BOARD
First Ward
LON DICKEY
Second Ward
(Vote for One)
G C RPEITY
S. W. WALKER
Third Ward
G A JOIAEY
Fourth Ward
MRS. FRANK WARD
Prehistoric Cemetery.
An interesting discovery was made
1t Crail, Scotland, recently, When
Some men of the telegraphic depart
ment were at work on the west links
they unearthed a stone coffin with a
buman male skeleton inside. There
Is nothing to show the date, but it is
obviously of great antiquity, and prob
zbly belongs to the same remote pe
flod as other stone coffins that have
heen discovered at various times near
‘he ola burgh,
Early Name for Cranberries,
John Josselyn, an KEnglish traveler
and naturalist who visited New Eng
land in 1638 and wrote an 'account
of Its “Rarities,” says: “Cranberry,
or bear berry (beeause bears used
much to feed upon them) iy a small
trayling plant that grows in salt
marshes thar are overgrown with
moss. The Indians and English use
them much, boiling them with sugar
for sauce to eat with their meat.”
Regular Teeth,
The teeth should be regular. They
should not be crowded together, and
there should be no aggressively notice
able spaces between them. They
should be white or seem white, The
unromantic truth (s that teeth are
never really white. But in contrast
with the lips they look white, and the
more healthy looking the lips the
whiter do the teeth look in contrast.
Removing Iron Rust.
Dampen the spots with water, rub
with a lump of citric acid and lay in
the sun. If the spots are not gone by
the time the cloth is dry, dampen and
lay in the sun again. When the fab
ric is very delicate it is better to dis
golve the acid in a little water and
dawmpen the spot with the solution.
Like A Breath
From the
Frozen No rth
~ We all know hew cooling and soothing are the
summer foods, crisp and cold from the refrigerator
Of course, though, there is a difference in re
frigerators:
Some are merely “‘ice boxes,” in which food is
kept—at a tcrrific cost of fast melting ice.
Our Eskimo Refrigerators
are built scientifically. Charcoal packed walls that
defy Old Sol’s scorching rays.
Food from such a refrigerator as this is doub
ly tempting. We can prove it.
Fitzgerald Furniture Co.
“The Store of Low Prices”
Corner of Main and Pine Telephone 49
5 Removing Label.
~ To easily and quickly remove a
label from a bottle, wet the face of
the label with ‘water and hold for a
moment over any convenient flame.
The steam formed penetrates the label
at once and softens the paste.
Yule for Christmas.
“Yule” is the old name for Christ.
mas, and is still used in Scot¥and and
‘the north of England, and retained in
the term “Yule-log.” It was originally
In England and Scandinavia the festi
val of the winter solstice.
Demand Your Shoes
Mended With
%Ao&%%g; %%m o N
Patronize Home Industry
Casper Hide and Skin Co.,
Ay Goneie—D,
oO e Gy
oy | s,;;’\i\yfr‘;lfi* T
A e Sl s iW\
REFRIGERATORS | |E
'~ e
4 -
ina refrigerator---providing, of course,
that it is a well-built and of standard
American make.
Time was when folks considered an
- “‘ice box” a luxury---intended only for
the rich and very well-to-do folks.
i Today, though, every well-informed
American knows there are economy
and health insurance arguments back
of the wide demand and use of refri
gerators.
First of all---the economy is in the
saving on foods which normally would
spoil during hot wheather.
; No home in Fitzgerald'ean afford to
be without a refrigerator; this surnmer.
Let us show you our new and com
plete line of Leonone refrigerators.
$15.00 to $lOO.OO
HOME FURNITURE €O.
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Day Is What One Makes it
Every day that is born into the
world comes like a burst of music and
rings itsclf all the 4day through; and
thou shalt make of it a dance, a dirge,
or a life march as thou wilt.—Thomasg
Carlyle.
“Light Blue Halir?
The police, no doubt, will have little
difficulty fn finding a man listed in a
recent police bulletin in New Yeork
as being wanted on a state charge.
“Light blue hair” should make him
conspicucus in almost any crowd.