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GLASSIFIED ADS
WANTED
PERMANENT HAIR WAVING—
Absolutely harmless, not affected by
shampooing, For full particulars
Phone 408 or 271-L. dSl5p
FOR SALE
FORD OWNERS Our Audtomatec
Accelerator Foot Feed will inake
your Ford drive: like a six. Saves
gas and repair bills, Guaranteed to
please or money refunded, Price
§2.85, delivercd. Perrin and Co | 228
West Oconee st, Fitzgerald, Ga. d7p
FOR SALY. CHEAP—Baby Graud
bevrolet automobile alimost new, can
be scen at Gathin's Garage, tf
# ‘
R e |
FOR lENT |
_____.__,_____.._.._..__..!
FOR SALY¥—4O acre farm, 20 i cul
tivation, painfed housc, good water,
barns, ctc, nice fruit, ncar school unl'
Waily mail route, 4 miles from thriving |
town, Price §55,000, other bargams, |
Sceaborn Sutton, Dowling Park, FYIL'%
It
FOR RENT—~Two furnished rooms
fon firstfloor, 416 W. Central Ave tf,
FOR RENT 401 South Main street,
2 Bed Rm»ms, Kitchen and Dining
Room. Apply F. H. Hilliard, Phone
451, Ltp
e b ks Bl ‘
REWARD—for Liver spotted Point
ec dog, bob tai!, notify Guy Robinson
315 West Central Ave, tipd
Drs. Holtzendorf
and Turner
DENTISTS
Upstairs, Next Door to the National
Drug Company
PHONE 57
H. A. MATHIS
OPTOMETRIST and
MFG. OPTICIAN
Eyes Examined, Glasses Fumished,
RROKEN LENS DUPLICATED
We Grind Our Own Glasses,
We Make Old
Furniture New
Picture Framing
Our Specialty
Phone 49
i Office Phone 511
Res, Phone 545
r
J. T. BRICE, D. C.
*
Chiropractor
Rooms 201-202
Farmer-Garbutt Bidg.
Office Hours 9:30 to 12; 1:30 to 5
Other Hours: By Appointment
Fitzgerald :-: Georgia
Meat Market For Sale
---Cheap for cash. Good location.
Reason for selling will be explain
ed on application. J.!W. Jolly, 409
East Pine Street.
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CDAKS LR .
S G e e B
“PILGRIMS” ALL YOUNG MEN
Though We Are in the Habit of Speak:
ing of Them as “Fathers,” They
Were Youthful.
Among the contributions to the liter
ature of the tercentennial of the land
fng of the “Pilgrim Fathers” is a
paper by Sir Arthur K. Shipley, mas
ter of Christ’s college, Cambridge, and
vice chancellor of the university. In
an editorial note introducing his article
tn the New York Times it is stated
that he is well known as a zoologist,
but why that qualifies him to write
learnedly about our Pilgrim ancestors,
who unever heard of Darwin or his
evolution theory, is unrevealed in the
note. We take it thut the alleged
“fathers” never claimed kinship with
the anthropoids and that they lookea
mwuch higher for information about
their origin than 1o a noted zoologist,
But, be that as it may, Sir Arthur does
inject a new thought, while not tell
ing us much else that is new about
those valiant and earnest souls who
embarked on the tiny Mayflower—tiny
In our eyes now, but not so consid:
ered by them—and buifeted the Atlan
tie gales for two months in search of
a land hospitable to them in the matter ‘
of religious freedom if not in climate.
When we speak of them as “fathers”
we conjure up a vision of grim-faced
men with long beards, venerable sen
tors bringing to the new world the wis
dom of their ripe years and long ex
perience in both the joy and the value
of treading the narrow path, but it is
an illusion. Sir Arthur says there
was only one of them over thirty-two
years of age. That one was Captain
Miles Standish, the valiant soldier, who
was only thirty-six. They were all
born about the year 1588, the time
when the wonderful Spanish armads
came to grief before the elements and
the ships of Sir Irancis Drake, and
every last one of them was a loyal
subject of King James and proud of
that fact. They were young, vigorous,
enterprising Knglishmen, genuine colo
nists, seeking religious freedom but not
pelitical exile. It took men and women
of such youthful vigor to endure the
hardships and dangers incident to the
first few years of their colonial life.
Kver since that day it has been like
young mun and women who have pio
aeered the way across the country
from the Atlantic to the Pacific taking
with them the same spirit of attach
ment to the home land while build
ing homes in the new. The “fathers”
bave remained at home, while the
“sons" have fared forth, spreading the
Mayflower spirit from ocean to ocean
and now across the seas to many lands
where {t Is growing and fruiting into
what we may hope will eventually en
couipass the whole earth.—St. Lflllal
Globe-Democrat.
To Kill Wood Borers In Lumber,
Klln drying is fatal to some If not
all the wood-boring grubs, the forest
service laboratory of the United
States Department of Agriculture at
Madison, Wis.,, has discovered. This
fact Is of considerable Importance to
users of ash, hickory, and many other
woods which are attacked by insects.
Manufacturers using ash lumber, fox
{nstance, are much annoyed by the
Injury worked by the red-headed ash
horer. Afr seasoning has no effect
on the activities of these grubs, but,
according to tests made by the labor
atory on wood Infested with them, any
klln-drylng process which ¢an be con
sidered practical for seasoning ash
of any thickness will put an end to
the horers.
NEW GRAND JURY
(Continued from Page 1)
Harrell Beall
Jas, T. Mathis
Geo. W. Lewis
H, Milton
A, R, Cooper
D, D. Garrison
D, V. Luke
E. R, Bragg
R, Davis
W, T. Paulk
M. D. Robitzsch
H, D, Vaughn
W. J. McGlamory
H. A, Burkhart
R. I, Maffett
W. M, Bryan
David L, Paulk
W. H, Roberts
G FPrvor Jr
M. W, Watkins
€. 5 Rice
A. W. Williams
J. S. Brown
O. P, Rodgers
W. R, McLendon
A. W. Lakee
R. V. Handley
M. E, Whitman
W, L, Babb -
1. T, Hendrix
F., L, Peeples
A. H. Thurman
John H. Mayes
«H, L., McLendon
A, C, Mixon
T C. Strange
S. G ‘Pryor Sr.
G, E, Ricker
C. A. Renard
1.. A, Yarborough
Hubuert Young
. A. Day
J. B, Davis
C M, Fnnig
€. € Parker
R Smith
J. H, Smith
S. A. Wright '
J. O, Planer
Wright Tomberlin
R. O. Stone
W, M, Martin
Warren Gibbs
G. A, Roberts
J. F. Goins
I. Gelders
N. M, Jordan
E, T, James
J. P. Patterson :
A. B, Frey
W, R. Paulk
D, D. Lovett
W, M, Mangum
T, J. Luke Jr.
G, A. Waup
B, T, Mercer
W. B. White*
J. E. Turner
M. W Chasteen %
0. S, Sanders
R. R, Dorminey 9
O, L. Bradshaw
1.. L. Mercier
1.. Robitz:ch :
J. N, Swearinger
J. .. Dorminey
H, A. Owen :
W, A, Hunter
J. B. Seanor
J. A. Bond
W. H, Robitzsch
I. C. Smith
J. D. Dorminy
John B. Russell
Ted E. Myers
F, M, Lamb,
: She Settled Matters.
One day at schooy the subject of
!lass president was brought up and
the suggestion that we vote on it. I
was not particularly fond of any of
e girls, so to settle matters 1 voted
for myself, never thinking that I
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 1
bad voted for myself.—Chicago Tribe
ine.
THE LEADER-ENTERPR'SE AND PRESS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7th, lQél
METAL MINERS WORKING
UNDER POOR CONDITIONS
State laws regulating working
conditions in metal mines are lax
and indefinite, especially in re
gard to ventllation, said a state
ment by the bureau of mines,
based on a survey of metal
mines in Montana, Colorado,
Utah, Nevada, Arizona and oth
er states by Daniel Harrington,
a mining engineer of the bureau,
and by engineers and surgeons
of the public health service.
“The better health of coal min
ers as compared with metal
miners probably is due to the bet
ter ventilation of coal mines,”
the statement said.
Are Not in Accord in Their Explana.
tion of Origin of the Planetary
System. |
Scientists explain the origin of our
planetary system in two ways. One
of these is the familiar nebular hy
pothesis of Lapace. The other is the
planetesmal theory of Professor Moul
ton, which is probably the most cor
rect one. According to this theory
our planetary system was originally
a vast spiral nebulae. The planets
- were formed by accretions of matter
In the spirals of the nebulae. OQur
‘ earth and its satellite, the moon, were
formed in this way. The moon being
a smaller accretion of matter, was
naturally attracted by the earth, which
was possessed of enough gravitation
to hold the moon. The moon there
fore is not a child of the earth, but
speaking In everyday parlance, we
might call it an adopted child. This
theory explains a great deal that the
nebular hypothesis does not. There
are vast numbers of such spiral neb
ulae in the heavens, indicating that
this is nature's accepted way of cre
ating new worlds, and it is for these
reasons that I accept this view of the
formation of the earth and the moon.
‘*tsburgh Dispatch.
set AS| '
CENTRAL METHODIST
. EPISCCPAL CHURCH
Sunday School 10:00 A. M.
Preaching Sunday 11:00 A, M, and
and 8:30 P, M. by Rev. G, E. Clary
of Byromville,
Midweek prayer service Wednesday
8:30 P. M, g
Public cordially invited to all serv
ices,
ISAAC P, TYSON, Pastor.
& ’ -
The Merchants Didn’t Do It!
DO WHAI? Follow the Market up in 1915, 1916,
1917, 1918, 1919---BUT THEY DID DO THIS;
They Followed It Downward In 1920
Yes it was a bitter pill but we had
to swallow it regardless of how
bad we hated to. |
Cotton and Cotton Goods
Are Advancing Fast
And the temptation is great to
raise the price on the goods we
now have. But Listen:---We ap
preciate your trade enough to
sell you what we have on hand
at the prices they were bought
to sell at 60 days ago, and you
know that issome lower than the
prides of today.
The next shipment will be higher so we suggest you do not
put off buying another day. Come to
The BAZA AR Store
“ Where Values Speak Louder Than Words ”
107-109 East Central Avenue Fitzgerald, Georgia
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Camels are made for Men who
e
-
. Think for Themselves
Such folks kmw real quality—and DEMAND it. :
They prefer (amels because Camels give them the
smoothest, mellwest smoke they can buy—because
they love the nild, rich flavor of choicest tobaccos,
perfectly blend¢d—and because Camels leave NO
5 CIGARETTYAFTERTASTE.
Like eyery nan who does his own thinking, you
, want fine tobaco in your cigarettes. You’ll find it
i; g ‘ in Camels.
/ fié 6? And, mind you, no flashy package just for show.
‘L§l‘< X fi No extra wrapers! -No costly frills!" These things
= pama—=/ don’t improv the smoke any more than premiums
a ““‘” ;| ©r coupons. ,
SAMQ & 3
@——> 21 But QUAIITY! Listen! That’'s CAMELS!
i i |
Pl -
) / 1 g -7
L e R STI ot
‘ a e R. J. REYNOLDS Tebacco Cfi-
T 3 : 9‘ Winston-Salem, N. C.
Listen to Reason
The earlier you buy, the more
you save and too, we have a bet
ter selection now than we will
'have 30 days from now.
Prices are Withdrawn on
Lots of Cotton Goods
by the mills and deliveries are
bad on lots of other goods now.
But our prices are neither wit}}-
drawn nor advanced and deliver
ies are certain if you will visit
this store and make your selec
tion now.