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CLASSIFIED ADS
WANTED
SALESM;\N\':\.\'T}{l), to sell tires
direct from fattory to user, Excep
tionally good commission, All or
spare time. Address, BURR OAK
TIRE COMPANY, BURR OAK,
MICHIGAN. 1t
FOR SALE
NEW AUTO SPRINGS—Any size,
Cheap prices; Ford fronts $3.00; Rear
$10.00; springs for any make Cars.
Casper Hide & Skin Co. tf
FOR SALE—House at 805 South
Main Street, Cheap. Cash or part
cash. Address Box 97, Rosslyn,Va.
FOR SALE—Rhode Island Red
Chickeng and eggs. Sam Willcox,
405 South <rant Street. tf
CORN .FOR SALE or exchange for
thrifty shoats weighing 40 to 60 Ibs.
or yearlings. J. A. G. Ragsdale, Rt.
3 tf
FOR SALE—Two fresh milk cows,
one J gallon cow, one 6 gallon. M E,
WHITMAN, 302 South Grant. d2O
FOR RENT
HOUSE FOR RENT—Apply F, W.
HULTZ, 220 N Main st, tf
FOR RENT-—Several nice furnished
rooms, 315 S. Grant st. tf
LOST
LOST—Tire rim on Monitor Drive
or Jessamine street, finder notify M.
C. PARKER, 315 W, Pine st Itp
' FOUND
—_—
MULE TAKEN UP—Black mare
mule with white nose taken up on
my farm Monday morning. Owner
can have same by paying for this ad
and damages. J. L. McMILLAN,
Osierfield, Ga. dlsp
Leader Want Ads bring results
just try one. :
For Fire and Life
Insurance
See C, W, QUEEN, Special Agent
for Bouthern States Life Insurance
Co, Office with G. S, WILLCOX,
in Old Third National Bank Bldg.,
Fitzgerald, Ga. eitf
H. A. Mathis
OPTOMETRIST and
MFG. OPTICIAN
Eyes Examined, Glasses Furnished,
BROKEN LENS DUPLICATED
We Grind Our Own Glasses.
We make Old
Furniture New
PICTURE FRAMING
OUR SPECIALTY!
Fitzgerald Furniture Co.,
Phone 49
Drs. Holtzendorf
and Turner
DENTISTS
Upstairs, next door to the
National Drug Company
PHONE 57
The Fitzgerald Shoe
Hospital Has Cut The
Price of Shoe Repairing
Men’s Shoes Half Soled, nailed
DE RIS ... $l.OO
Ladies’ Shoes Half Soled
Nailed or 5ewed........... 75¢
Only Best Quality Leather and
All Work Guaranteed.
Fitzgerald Shoe Hospital
W. E. SANDERSON, Prop.
L B s e R R 100
" m';@:m; e || =]
5-"ao | EN |
Rey § . NPy
e= | B P
TO SEE NIGHT COME
Was So Restless He Couldn’t Sleep
and Daylight Was Always
Welconae
“With the exception of a little
milk toast, which comprised my diet
for more than eight weeks, I could
aot eat anything,” said Capt, Geo.
W. Womble, residing at 105 Jen
ings st, Knoxville, Tenn, a highly
respected citizen of that city,
“I am now able,” continued Cap
tain Womble, “after taking two bot
tles of Tanlac, to eat practically any
thing. I had a bad form of stomach
ind intestinal trouble for a long time
imd for months my condition * had
heen such that [ suffered agony. 1
got so I could not ecat the simplest
food, T tried doctor after doclor and
all kinds of medicine but wothing
that was prescribed for me seemed
to do me any good, I had a tprrible
pain in my breast just ovfr my
heart and for weeks and gveeks 1
got no relief, :
“I finally got so nervous thht I ac
tually dreaded to see night qome as
I could not sleep and was \ always
50 restless that I would rejpice to
sce daylight come. I was alsp con
stipated all of the time, In fadt, life
seemed a burden and I was sé mis
erable that I was almost on the verge
of despair, Several of my neighbors
told me about Tanlac and advised
me to try it,
“I am personally acquainted with
Mr. Dan Chambliss, of the firm of
Kuhlman & Chambliss, and when I
told him of my condition and how
I suffered he advised me to begin
taning Tanlac without delay and that
it had reliecved hundreds of the best
people in Knoxville. 1T have now
taken two bottles of Tanlac and am
giving you this testimonial in the
hope that it may induce others to
take it, Since taking this medicine
I actually feel like I had been made
all over again with the youth, energy
and ambition of a sixteen year old
boy.” Advertisement.
-
A Word To The Wise
“In March I as called to the bed
side of my sister in Brewton, Ala,,
She was given up to die and was al
most dead, Talked in a whisper. The
doctors said nothing but an opera
tion would save her and she was too
weak for that Her cotor was yel
low as a pumpkin and she was filled
with gas. That\day I heard of Mayr’s
Wonderful Rem and went and got
a bottle for her, n three weeks she
was able to be abput and walked a
mile to church.
I am praising your medicine to evs
eryone,” It is a simple, harmless prep
aration that removes the catarrhal mu
cus from the intestinal tract and al
lays the inflamation which causes
practically all stomach liver and in
testinal ailments, including appendi
citis, One dose will convince or the
money refunded —McLemore and Na
tional Drug Cos., adv,
Sausages.
Surprising as it may seem, there are
1,700 different varieties of sausages In
the world today. All nationalities love
certain national Hishes, and some form
of sausage seems Included in the cul
sine of every country. China makes
sausages, and very good ones, from
the eastern point &f view. Germany
{8 pre-eminently a sausage-eating na
tion. Great quantities of this Zood
are consumed by the people of Latin
countries. In Italy and France they
are eaten more as a relish than as a
dish, and the noonday meal often
commences with thin slices of cold
sausage, flanked with a few olives and
& pat of fresh butter. Sausages in
France are assoclated with certain
fete days, and a kind of blood saum
sage is always served at the Christ
mas eve supper. Neither {s sausage
a modern food, born of economy and
the utilizing of meat scraps. The town
of Koenigshurg, Germany, in 1558,
celebrated the national dish by mak-
Ing a bologna sausage more than 600
feet long.
Strike in New Zealand.
It was in October, 1013, that New
Zealand experienced a food and fuel
shortage as a result of a general strike,
which began with a walkout of ship
wrights. New Zealand had been re
ferred to frequently as “a land with
out strikes” by magazine writers, who
found in itw labor and social laws ma
terial for much praise. Its industrial
laws often were held up as models.
New Zealand is a British colonial pos
sesslon, discovered by Tasman in 1642,
The settlers have been often at war
with the natives, the Maoris. The do
minion does not have a soclalist gov
ernment, although it has adopted radi
cally soclalistic policles. The govern
ment is vested In a governor, appoint
ed by the crown, and a general assem.
bly consisting of a legislative council,
appointed by the governor, and a
house of representatives, elected.
Skl
Look Inta Thia 5
If things don't come your way, pen
haps it's because you are not in the
right place.—Boston Transcript,
S "
ISOLD KISS FOR s3ooj
R Ry
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-,;:-:q-'-‘,:,"%-g‘,'-;; Pl Ay
Would you give $3OO for a kq
from the lips of Mary Pickfor
for sweet charxty’s. sake? We
Mary is not selling kisses, but Sig
Holmquist, a movie actress—* e
Mary Pickford” of Sweden, who igl'
visiting this country, sold a kiss
s3oo—the monwg to Freg
Milk for Italy ' Frank -
derson of Long Island was ;
Facky biddes. X
ONE OF NATURE’S WONDERS
Nest Constructed by Mother Wasp s
a Real Marvel in Its Abso
lute Perfection.
The solitary wasp called Eumenes
amedel atfains great excellence alike
in the chase and in the craft of build
ing; it is a “Nimrod and a Vitruvius
by turns.” With minute pebbles and
salviated mortar it builds a finely
finished cupola about three-quarters
of an inch in height, the outside of
which is . covered with glistening
grains of quartz or sometimes with
tiny snail shells; the orifice at the
top is “like the mouth of an am
phora, gracefully curved, worthy of a
potter’'s wheel.”
After the mother wasp lms‘pluced
an egg in her well-fashioned nest she
adds five to ten . small caterpillars,
and it is remarkable that the egg on
the well-stocked nest develops into a
female wasp, while that in the meag
erly provisioned nest becomes the
much smaller male,
It appears that the stung cater
pillars that form the living larder in
side the wasp’s cell are but imper
fectly paralyzed, and toss about when
touched. Now, the least pressure
would crush the delicate egg. So it
is hung by a thread from the roof of
the cupola, and after the Eumenes
grub hatches it makes the cast shell
of the egg into a flexible staircase
&0 that it can reach the caterpillars
and bite them, yet retreat if they are
0o vigorously recalcitrant, This fe
perfection,
\
HOW LEGENDS “TAKE HOLD”
One That Concerns' George Washing
ton Was Long Believed by Resi
\ dents of New York.
That there is nothing too impossi
ble to forbid it being the basis of &
legend that will find credulous believ
ers for generations is again proved
by a story current in the Ramapo val
ley, near New York. Like so many
other tules known a'ong the east
coast, it concerns George Washington
and it was believed by thousands of
the residents of the valley up to s
generation ago,
It appears that Washington, whes
the Continental army was encampeé
at what is now the Ramapo station
on the main line of the Erie railroad,
was uncertain as to the inten
tions of Lord Howe, in command of
the British fleet and army at New
York. He used to climb frequently
to the high peak of the Torne, a mile
north of the valley, from which he
<owd see a part of New York bay,
and there spy on the fleet. In the up
per part of the peak is a tiny stream,
hidden in the crevices of the rocks,
and the dropping of the water sounds
llke a watch ucking.
lLegend has it that Washington
dropped his watch in a fissure of the
Torne on one of his observations, and
that the timepiece has gone on ticking
ever since!
Old Quindaro Settlement.
The old town of Quindaro on the
Missouri river above Kansas City was
founded in 1856 by free state boom
ers who came from New England te
help make Kansas free. Kansas City
and Leavenworth were either neutral
or were dominated by sympathizers of
the South,
The New England emigrants wanted
a “port of entry” of their own. The
town was built up rapidly with a large
hotel, great warehouses, a steamboat
landing, and other evidences of a “fu
ture great metropolis.” During the
Civil war, however, the men all went
to fightt When they returned the
Union Pacific was building west
through the Kaw valley, and a little
later the Hannibad bridge was con
structed, forever making Kansas City
the “port of entry.”
Quindaro was abandoned. Its ho
tel and warehouses went to decay,
and now all that remains are the ruing
and the memory of a struggle of a
few brave men who belleved they were
right, but who were mistaken in their
Judgment as to the geographical loca
tion of the “future great metropolis.”
=—Kansas City Star.
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1921.
:
It Happened f
. |
In Fitzgerald
chuai s e
And Is Happening to Fitzgerald
People Every Week |
—_— |
The case told below is not an un
common thing. The same occurs fre
quently and will conztnue to happenf
as long as folks have kidneys and ov
ertax the kidneys,
J. F. T, Williams, retired farmer,
505 W, Suwanee st Fitzgerald, says:
“l have used Doan’s Kidney Pills
when my kidneys were weak and I
bad a dull aching across my back.
My kidneyp acted irregularly and
this annoydd me, especially at night,
I began us\ng Doan’s Kidney Pills
from the Ddwguark Drug Co., and
they helped me, ulating my kid
neys and strengthemN\npg my back. I
‘have great confidence \n Doan’s Kid
}ncy Pills. 2.
Price 60c, at all dedlers, Don’t
simply ask for a kiduey \remed-y—-—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the\ same that
Mr, Williams had, Foster-Milburn
Co,, Mirs, Buffalo, N. Y,
| Advertisement.
e
It Certainly Does
During the recent co-operative
sale which was held here in our fair
city by our enterprising merchants, a
negro woman walked into one of the
most prominent drug-stores and
asked to be shown a certain article
which is considered @ necessity in all
well regulated American house-hold
The young clerk, who waited on
her was very enterprising and wished
to make as many sales as possible in
order that his empluyer might “rise
up and call him blessed,” very cour
teously and obligingly showed her
the different kinds of the article for
whigh she sought, they carried in
stock; finally after much hesitation
she chose one priced at fifty cents,
this so much encouraged the, young
man, that he called her attention to a
certain article in the toilet line which
they were selling around the price of
twenty cents. This article chanced
to be put up in a highly decerated
and very gaudy box, which struck a
responsive chord in her African
breast, for on beholding it she
scorned the necessity that she came
to purchase and in spite of the ener
getic clerk remionstramces sailed out
of the store with the powder in her
hand and joy in her hearr.
Now the clerk is pondering over
the same perplexing question which
has puzzled the brain of the business
world for Lo these many years—Doey
it PAY TO ADVERTISE
Palm Beach, Sizes 30 to 50
In Waist.. See Label
A Good Assortment of Patterns
~ to select from at
1 ss.oo>§Qir
White Oxfords
$3.00 pair
Ladies sizes
Men’s Vici
Oxfords
$5 pair
The BAZAAR STORE
f ) T o et T e T
“1 WONDER IF 1 i IT ALL DEDENDS ON : ; )
P =) gy, [Eass] B
BRieco = B
el 7 AR\ ) Y
i . v .”/ T ~%.-,’= = ‘ = NN, J
---(z00d Service, Service That Corresponds to The
High Standards of The Goods We Handle
PEEFELT N NN 4 b
has been the 0L 7 *%&\& NN\ L
secret of our past Vfi/ e RSN AR
success and al f’fi\;fla" i eG/ 0y
was will be--your :figh Al tri 0 o *%
_t‘ Y | et B : /;v'w
comfort and con- /X g-‘ e | e
venience are our Z;E;;‘;ft(,\- N &1\ Vs
firs't considera- &i* e k' S
tion. "t‘;fi%, e /\;.x "g:
| ¢ ‘\u.'.“-r\é ‘ é %// \" ",:Z?
We Have Pianos and Victrolas
in All Models and Prices
" ;:?‘J%m_mmuuu LT Our Slgock ()f VICTOR
"/[il:,!i! RECORDS make buying
SOSWW o pleasure,
G Y| B
o SmealliN| Lct us show you how
g NATE R B .
”s‘\q S T $ good our service really
o BT .
vdls B IS. :
L%fa()séaw A i @o.,
“@e,oendaé/e Musical Merchandise”
120 SOUTH GRANT STREET TELEPHONE 66
Extra
Pants
“ Where Values Speak
Louder Than Words”
107-9 E. Central Ave.
Ladies’ Brown
Satin Street
Pumps, Baby Louis
$5.00
Canvas Baby
Louis Heel
Pumps
$3 pair