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GLASSIFIED ADS-
WANTED
PEANUTS WANTED—White Span
ish Peanuts, Farmers Stock bulk, car
fots and other farm produce, W, C,
Gray, Ocilla, Ga, pdNovll
WANTED—Congenial people can se
cure delightful rooms and also meals
for thirty dollars per month Inquire
at Leader Enterprise, tf,
FOR SALE
“:;-’R S:KL_L Chrysanthemums far
sale; all varicties in bloom now, Mrs,
H. P, Pollard, 714 W, Oconee Street,
Itpd,
EOR SALE-—Baby (;ra.nd Chevrolet
Automobile in good condition at a
bargain_ See M. Gottlich, 210 East
Pine St, tf,
FOR SALE OR RENT—IO room
house and 10 acres on Washington
Ave, Just west of the Davis Variety
Works. A, G, Brown 406 W_Orange
street. Phone 118,
FOR RENT
FOR SALE—Fulghum Seed Oats
Any quantity, J. C_ Bush, Itpd
FOR RENT—One living apartment
and store building and warchouse on
flast Pine St; Also one five-room
house 515 E #Magnolia St J. C. Bush,
Itpd,
FOR RENT—On account of parties
teaving the city for several months,
will rent their home furnished to de
sirable parties, or will rent three or
more rooms, South side, Address X
Y Z, clo Leader, tf
FOR RENT—On Nov, Ist, an attract
ive apartment for two ladies, to do
light housekeeping. Phone 29 or call
Sll W, Central Ave, tf
FOR RENT-—Furnished and unfurn
ished rooms, Mrs. E, H. Danjels, 215
East Central Avenue, tf,
LOST
ESTRAYED—One black mare mule,
Ceft with gear on, |. C, Bush. Itpd
A TONIC
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Blood. When you feel its
strengthening, invigorating effect, see how
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply
fron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it. The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, In'igor
ating Effect. 60c. |
No Worms in a Heaithy Child
All children troubled with Worms have an un
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and asa
rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance.
GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im
prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength
ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
throw off or dis el the worms, and the Child will be
in perfect healt ™ Pleasant to take € 60c per bottle.
Manon Grocery Co.,
Y
“WHERE QUALITY TELLS
AND PRICES SELL” |
PROMPT DELIVERY |
GlbtAgon SORD, Bar ... ........ §¢
Arbuckies Coftes | ..............23¢
White House Coffee ........40c Ib,
Charmer Coffee, I\ ............ 25¢
French Market Coffee, ......30¢ Ib.
Luzianne Coffee ..)... ...... 35¢c lb.
Best Green Coffee |..........14c Ib,
Compound Lard,...}........ 13¢c Ib.
S I VRRLIIN L 0 B 8
Sugar, per pound Wi coinivic il
Best Whole Grain *1ce...........?c
Dry Salt Meat, Ib {.............16¢c
Smoked Meat, Ib, ..............19¢
Best Self-Rising Flour ...........$1
Scratch Feed, Ib, sedieecenenia. 304€
Kerosene, Gallon ...............18¢c
Green Cabbage, head ............5c
New Irish Potatoes ..............5¢
B 5c BORD, 7 bave1.........., 2%
Dont Forget the Place!!
Manon Grocery Co.,
Phone 520 226 East Pine St
Office Phone 511
Res, Phone 545
r
J. T. BRICE, D. C.
*
Chiropractor
Rooms 201-202
Farmer-Garbutt Bldg.
Office Hours 9:30 to 12; 1:30 to §
Other Hours By Appointment
Fitzgerald :-: Georgia
Drs. Holtzendorf
and Turner
DENTISTS
Upstairs, Next Door to the National
Drug Company
PHONE 57
: 2 |(o (&
(o | [ £ Rl
| SWEET A o ( ' § ' =
one ol (< %
by o A\ o - , ;
F. Parks |t ) o ) b
I ‘ l/ E =/
mrooeven~ | IR j ——
T T S
INSECTS MAKE LEAVES ‘WALK’
Queer Creatures Responsible for Odd
Belief That Has Long Been Held
in Australia.
There are some sirange leaves in
Australia which the people used to
think could walk alone. Whenever
there came a gust of wind these queer
leaves blew off in a perfect shower.
As leaves generally do, they turned
over and over, and rested upon the
ground, Then they would seem t¢
crawl toward the trunk of the tree
from which they fell. Since that time
it has been found that these leaves,
as they were thought to be, were real
insects and lived upon those wvery
trees. Their bodies are thin and flat
and their wings veined, just like a
leaf. If they are disturbed their legs,
which are folded away under their
bodies, leave their whole shape ex
actly like the leaf of a tree, with stem
and all. Bright green in the summer,
these singular little insects, chame
leon-like, slowly change their color to
a dingy brown, just like a leaf that
has been frosted. It is strange thatg
with wings, they do not fly, but rath
er walk or crawl along the ground.
Human Thermometer,
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 a man, who
acts as a human thermometer, looks to
determine the heat. His method is
slmple. He spits into the hole, and if
the spit turns to steam. the tempera
ture Is not sufficient. When the heat
fe 80 great that the saliva is shot back
at hiin with a lte explosion, every
thing fs &l right.—John Knight Shry
ock In Asla,
©Old Bei! Splendidly Preserved,
In ap old graveyard in County Am
trim, Ireland, a farmer, while plowing,
unearthed a bronze church bell weigh.
Ing more than 160 Ibs., and belleved
tbe over 309 years old. The bell s
in a splendid state of preservation,
with a clear, powerful tone. The old
Kirkmoyle parish church, where the
find was made, has been Ia ruins sines
1692,
Epsomn-Saix,
It was owing to cattle refusing tg
Irink from an impregnated spring on
Iprom common in 1618 that Epsom
wlt was discovered. Doctors examined
fne spring, and in consequence of thele
rerdiet all the aristoeracy of Englané
vere hurryl@ to Epsom & few vears
wer to take the warers. ) ardoy
“afl.
Ancient Game (i Hop-Scotch
All mere men's eames must cive
sride of place a~ regards anuquity
o those played by children Hop
teotch for instance 1s at teast 2.000
rears old Some of the singing games
ire of Norse origin, while tipcat was
Mayed 4.000 yeurs ago
Most Men Will Remermber That
Roys know mnearly as many untrue
things as grown folk. Does anyone
remember their sayving that, “if a tun
tle got hold of a boy's toe it wouldn’t
let go until the sun goes down?'—
Exchange.
Boon of Forgetfulness,
To make people laugh is to make
hem forget. What a benefactor to
jumanity is he who can bestow for
tetfulness.—Victor Hugo.
t Wurnan J P, Honored.
Ar the old South Pass, In Wyoming,
a granite monument marks the site
‘ of the office of America’s first woman
Justice of the peace, KEsther Morris,
l who was ene of the suffrage pleneers
MICKIE SAYS—
ONE ADVANTAGE Of
ADVERTISING \S (WS A
NOULUNG BUSINESS MAN , BY
VUSING \¥ PERSISTENYIN AND
BACKING \Y UP, CAN BLILD
LP AS GOOD A BLUSINESS IN
A COUPLE OF VERRS AS WS
OLOER NON- ADVERTSING
COMPETIYOR HWAS WON BNV
NEARS OF SERVICE
<R Ny
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VEFSS I W
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7 A“% \.{\\’J
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There Is Hope, as Munyon Sala.
Bill Steedum says that if a young
married couple can Mve through Sep
tember without having a fatal quarrel
over whose duty is to get up and get
the extra cover, the chance is pretty
ulrtolhountuthonmmb
mato ple season, anyhow.—Wilming
va News-Journal,
CRY CAME FROM HIS HEART
Thesplan Was by Ne Means Acting
When He Gave Such Strong Vent
te His Feelings.
Otis Skinner was recounting some
of his experlences in “Kismet,” not
the motion-plcture version but the
stage play, in which he made such a
big success all over the country a few
years ago.
“lI remember when we played Cin
clonati,” he said, “that we had trou
ble with our harem pool. We always
tested It hefore the show and on this
night, instead of the slightly heated
water pouring through the pipes, i*
was Jets of steam.
“We sent out and got all the ice we
could procvre, but even so, when the
harem girls plunged in, they turned
red as heets, A little later, I was
called on to throw the grand vizier,
Mr. Hamilton Revelle, into the pool.
“We had forgotten to tell him ahout
the temperature, and when he struck
the water he let out a vell that we
thought would bhreak up the show. But
it didn’t and you can imagine our sur
prise next day when the ecrities coms
plimented Revelle on the spontaneons
outery he made when 1 threw him te
bis death.”
Havre Port Undertaking.
A large job is about to be undertak
en in connection with the deepening
of the outer harbor of the French por:
of Le Havre, The scheme includes
erecting and working, on both nortt
and south sides of the outer harbor
transshipping herths, wharves, mooring
buoys, raised earthworks, roadways
# dock for petroleum, gasoline ané
other inflummable hydrocarbides, s
complete plant comprising both quay
side and foating equipment for han
dling general goods, coal, heavy olls
petroleum, and gasoline, together with
storage sheds, taunks and machinery
likewise, rails running along the quoys
and joining with the state railway.
It appears very much as though the
French were going to make a strong
bid for the world's shipping, judging
by this and other extensive improve
ments In French ports.—Scientific
American,
Who Controls Back of Seat?
“Say, tnke your coat off of my
new hatr!”
“My coat isn't on your hat. And
If 1t Is, you can just take your hat
away. My coat’s going to stay where
it i§!™ !
“Yon ean put your ceat on your
tap. I'll call the usher.”
That's the way the argument be
#an hetween the two women In th‘i
wovie theatre. The woman in frnm‘
had dropped her coat over the hack
of her seat. The woman in back ob-
Jected, because she had “parked” her
new spring hat there,
But the question, who owns the
back of the seat—the person who
sits in the seat or the one behind—
was left unsettled, because the owner |
of the cout moved to another seat.— 1
New York Sun. |
e L
Sea May Reclaim Wayward Boys.
Belfeving that the lure of the sea
might prove the winning appeal te
hovs who resist the conventional
schooling of shore life, a Baltimore
shipping expert proposes the establish
ment of a training ship at that port,
Not only would such a school ship
Serve as a co-operative unit in the
educatfonal system of the city and
state. but it would give additional
marine training caleulated to vield a
supply of American sallors for the
merchant vessels of the aation.—Pop
ular Mechanics Magazine.
Wealth in Hawaii, -
The territory of Hawaii wili produce
enough motor fuel for its own needs
within two years, They would also be
able to supply the requirements of the
army and navy forces there. should
thelr bases of supply be cut off. Com
merclal manufacture of fuel alecohol
from sugar molasses has heep made
practicable on a large scale on the is
mand of Maui
She Matters.
One day at schoon the subject of
tlass president was' brought up and
the suggestion that we vote on it. I
was not particularly fond of any of
she girls, so to settle matters I 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 }
dad voted for myself.—Chicago Tribe
ine.
Mica indispensable,
The maln importance of mica ia
modern Industry lies in the fact that
& is one of the best nonconductors
of electricity and is, therefore. indls
pensable 'n electrical engiveering. On
this account the British government
took over part of the mica field im
India and worked it as a state \m
dustry in order to make sure of haw.
tng a constant supply.
Wonders of the Alr.
A little fellow of Beacon Hill on
seeing the dirigible passing overhead
the other day called out: “Oh, moth
or, come and look! There's a sub
marine flylng in the sky, just like an
airplane.”"—Boston Transcript.
Man’s Perversity.
The opportunities we least oftén let
to by are opportunities to make fools
f ourselves,—Boston Transcript.
THE LEADER-ENTERPR'SE AND PRESS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1921
; Ever Catcn o Jvicroplerus?
| Toe blaek huss e of Iwo specieg—
l:h« swall-tmoath tiack bass and the
mrge mouth Liack lass writes Dr. R
IW. Shuteldr 1n the Americrp Forestry
Lagazine. Both helong to the genus
lblk-ropwrus. and are readily distin.
guished through the fact that in the
’ last-named form the angle of the gape
. of the mouth {s pack of the imaginary
vertical llne from the ceuter of she
pupil of the eye upon either side. RNe
gamy are these fish that they are
known as the “gamefish of the North,”
and anglers prefer to fish for them
bove all other kinda
' Tne Real "i. .. 2r Goose.”
“Mother Goose was a real charace
ter, and not an imaginary personage
a 8 has been supposed. Her maiden
name was Elizabeth Foster and she
was born in 1665. She married Isaase
Goosse in 1693 and a few years later
became a member of the Old South
church, Boston. She died ia 1757,
aged ninety-two years. The first edi
tion of her songs, which were orig
fnally sung to her grandchildren, wae
publisbed in 1716 by ber son-in-law,
Thcmas Fleet.
What a Real Pear! rls,
The real jeurl—that 1s the fine,
spherical, iridescent gem—is not &
product of the mother-of-pearl or nacre
lining of the oyster shell, as are the
barocque and seed pearls, but is forme
ed In the gills and never grows In
size. They begin as a small blister
containing a hyaline fluid which con.
denses slowly and gradually hardens
{n concentric layers. The Iridescence
Is due to the minute films of air or
gas that are co ‘»d between the
ayers.
Yule for CThristmas.
“Yule” is the old name for Christ
mas, and is still nsed in Scotland 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
YOU WILL BE WELCOME IN
OUR MEN’'S BARACA CLASS
NEXT SUNDAY
We meet at 10:00 o‘clock every Sun
day at the First Methodist Church—
Corner of Lee and Magnolia Streets.
We want you to be with us,
Come, ge the Baraca habit,
Come next Sunday Sure!
No questions will be asked.
R s ORN Cont Solts - 510.98 mp
g - ; 3 @ 1.\«" ~%\& : ‘]
g % . ' L o
S AND | li% :
. CHARACTER || i)
s Al i '
% _ N\ ;;é | %
= Should be the first consideration R % bl
= Inselecting your wearing apparels .{l2’3,'s's\\}‘l
= throughout the year. G ey
= Many people are impressed with a vast profusion —_——
£ of object gathereq at random through the Practice of False Economy. =
g Replace this effect with a\well chosen garment of Real Quality and E‘
= achieve g real simplicity that éxpresses the very spirit of style. g
= At Marcus Quality Shop you are aware of an g
25.00 ; atmosphere of QUALITY that prevails through- =
_ e Dresses sl3° out the vast assortment of character styles. =
Sk 3 Won’t you come in and let us demonstrate to 'S
a 5 you the Inexpensiveness ot Good Taste? =
&“‘ Our Dresses, Coats and Coat Suits are the E
_.\4- R newest of to-day. You are coidiully invited to 5
(s’/,la.\ look ’em over. =
| W —rr——
AT Marcus Quality Shop |
‘}'(E ~——— 112 East Pine Street ——— 1. ‘S
T )T~ | D E
P Ay B B L e eRS e Y s T ST
'333*3;?5?4%?5}3 PR os,|me O\ K o 0
e 1 T | @-~ =
Az, | | IR\ o PR
’__| -\ i i, i ;f* ‘
= : T . i \
What It Can Do For You—
First of all it can bring to you the NEWS of your
own home town. Week af.er week, t prints in
detail the happenings of the community. Faith
fuly it sets forth the goings and coming of its
people, giving careful attention to the homely
little items that are ignored in the overcrowded
° dailies of the big cities.
It can furnish you with more interesting informa
tion about people you know, or used to know, than
could a dozen private correspondents. The one
er who writes to you may know only a few of your
friends at home—but your Home Town Paper
knows them all. It tells you about people you are
interested in. ;
Finally, in a good, hard business sense your home
Town Paper is of value to you. It keeps you posted
as to the industrial and commercial growth of a
community which familiarity may have caused
you to neglect. It often reveals what keen people
see, right in your home town, a mine of golden
opportunity. The moral is obvious—
¢ Leader-Lnterprise and Press
A Regular Visitor from Home
Three Times-a-Week. ;