Newspaper Page Text
|
is a prescription for ‘
Malaria, Chiils and Fever,
Dengue or Bilious Fever. |
£3 lgil_lswtel; germs !
y—
PZCANS
Ship us your Pecans and secure highest market
prices. We can use all grades and sizes in any quanti
ty. We shell all grades of pecans and sell direct to
consumers, therefore can pay better prices. Submit
samples and we will quote prices.
SOUTH GEORGIA PECAN NUT CO.
Esablished 1914
114 South Lee Street VALDOSTA, GA.
Keds, for Men Youths
and Boys with heavy
crepe rubber soles, lace
to the toe
A Pair
$2 & $2.50
THE TOGGERY
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SAY ‘“BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSISTI
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years.
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
_ V)’Accegt only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
: Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists,
Aspizin 15 the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture @f Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid
- that startled the motor car industry
THE motor car industry was start-
A Jed when Buick presented the
new Buick with an engine vibra
.tionless beyond belief. | i
7 If you have driven this great new
car, with this remarkable engine,
you know why. '
| Its fluid smoothness makes other
motor cars seem rough, harsh,
: noisy.
People who have driven Buicks
- for years and people who have
owned much more expensive cars,
are captivated by the luxury
_of this one.
Adols '
b EVER BUILT
Leonard Bros. Motor Co.
East Central Ave. Fitzgerald, Georgia
. When Better Automobiles Are Built Buick Will Build Them
W. L. Harrell Nursery Co.
Growers of
HIGH GRADE PECAN TREES
Fitzgerald, Ga.
Tan or Black Calf, six
eyelets blucher or bal
oxfords with rubber
hee! and Goodyear
welt : .
A Pair
———————EE e
Men’s and Young
Men’s Odd Trousers
in the very latest pat
terns and materials
A Pair
s4to $8.90
THE LEADER-ENTERPRISE AND PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1926.
{New Settlers On Farm
| Lands In S. Georgia
| Valdosta, Ga.—-J. M. Jacks and
:Harry Miller, recently of Wisconsin,
!have bought small farms a few miles
south of Valdosta, on which they are
,preparing to build homes. Primarily
|they expect t olive in Lowndes coun-‘
ty and enjoy the splendid cilmate and
}eng‘age in market gardening, just to‘
'keep active. Both visited many other
‘parts of South Georgia before finally‘
selecting a place for a home. |
C. E. Hughes, New York state, has
bought a place a few miles from the
city and expects to engage in the
poultry business. Besides producing
eggs in large quantities, Mr. Hughes
will also breed fancy chickens ofr
fanciers and enjoy life in this sec
tion of the country, having found the
climate well suited to his likes. .
Finds Menagerie In |
[
Back Yard of Home
Franklin, Ky.—At least one Simp-:
son county farmer has had a greater
thrill than a visit to the circus in boy-:
hood days. ;
John Denning, the farmer, awoke
vesterday morning to find a good
portion of a menagerie in his back
yard—three camels and an elephant
to be exact. !
The camels evidently were dry, as
they were clustered about a rain bar
rel. The elephant was hungry. He|
was in the garden. |
Catching the camels to return them |
to their owners, a circus that played
here Tuesday, was an easy matter. l
The elephant, however, found the;
truck garden fare apparently more to,
his liking than the circus picket line
rations, as he refused to leave until'
late in the afternoon. |
} The garden wes stripped clean. |
A PROCLAMATION
Submitting a proposed amendmemi
to the Constitution of Georgia to be
voted on at the General Election to
be held on Tuesday, November 2,
1926, sald amendment to authorize the
collection and preservation of rec
ords of Vital Statistics.
\ By His Excellency,
Clifford Walker, Governor,
State of Georgia,
Executive Department,
August 24, 1926.
WHEREAS, the General Assembly
at its extraordinary session in 1926
proposed an amendment to the Con
stitution of this State as set forth
in an Act approved April 3, 1926,
RECORDS OF VITAL STATISTICS.
No. 17, Second Session.
An Act to amend paragraph two of
section six of article seven of the
Constitution of the State of Geor
gia, and for other purposes
Section 1. The General Assembly
»f the State of Georgia hereby pro
poses to the people of Georgia the gol
lowing amendment to the Constitution
of the State of Georgia, to-wit: That
paragraph two of section six of arti
cle seven be amended by adding at
the end of said seetion, arter the
clause, “and to provide for necessary
sanitation,” the following words, to
wit: “and for the collection and pres
ervation of records of birth, death,
disease and health.” ‘
Sec. 2. Be it further enacted by
the authority aforesaid. That if the
above proposed amendment to the
Qonstitution shall be agreed to by
two-thirds of the members elected to
sach of the two Houses of the General
Assembly the same shall be entered
on their Journals, with the yeas and
aays taken thereon, and the Gover
wor shall cause the said amendment
to be published in one or more news
papers in each congressional district
of the State for two months belore
the next general election; and the
Governor is hereby authorized and di
rected to provide for the submissicu
of said amendment to the people at
said election. The persons voting at
said election in favor of said amend
ment shall have on their ballots the
words: “For ratification of amz2nd
ment to Article 7, Section 6, Puara
graph 2, of the Constitution, providing
for the collection and preservation of
records of birth. death, disease and
health.” The persons opposed to this
amendment shall have on their ballots
the words: “Against ratification of
amendment to Article 7, Section 6,
Paragraph 2, of the Constitution, pro
viding for collection and preservation
of records of birth, death, disease,
and health” If a majority of the
electors qualified to vote for mem
bers of the General Assembly, voting
thereon, shall vote for ratification of
sald amendment, the Governor, when
he ascertains the same from the Sec
retary of State, to whom the returns
from said election shall be referred in
the same manner as in cases of elec
_tiong of members of the General As
sembly, to count and ascertain the
tesult, shall issue his proclamation
for one insertion In one daily news
paper of the State, announcing the re
suit and declaring the ratification of
said amendment.
Sec. 3. Be it further enacted by
:h& euthority aforesaid, that all laws
and parts of laws in conflict with this
ie: be and the same are herebv re
sezled.
Approved April 3, 1926
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Clifford
~alker, Governcr of said State, do
issue this my proclamation hereby
zsciaring that the proposed foregoing
amendment to the Constitution i
seomitted for ratification or rejec-
Zca to the voters of the State quali
‘lsd to vote for members of the Gen
aral Assembly at the General Election
-3 be held on Tuesday, November 2
1928.
CLIFFORD WALKER,
Governor.
~ By the Governor:
S. G. McLENDON,
Secretary of State.
A Practical Solution of Georgia’s “Live At
Home’” Problem Available --- Georgia
Bankers and Business Men Can Solve ¢
| By RAY WHITE
Editor, The Middle Georgian
THE WEEK, in whose columns it
was my privilege last week to present
data and facts to show that Georgia’s
paramount and all-important develop
ment problem is to see that Georgia
“lives at home,” has asked me in this
isue to point out what I consider the
practical steps to take toward the
solution. ;
To any one who has iived in an
average small town serving an aver
age rural community in Georgia, and
studied the problems of such com
munity, the problem is not so diffi
cult of solution as it at first may ap
pear. Indeed, the problem is being
solved in many communities in Geor:
gia today and the solution can be
hastened for every rural community
in Georgia through the application of
planning and procedure, the sound
ness of which already has been
proved and demonstrated.
While the solution must necessari
ly rest primarily and chiefly in the
hands of individuals making up the
community itself, it has also been
fully demonstrated that the bankers
and business men of the state must
furnish the leadership. |
The Cow-Hog-Hen program and
the plan of rural community organi
zation, sponsored for years by the
Georgia Association, under the lead
ership of such men as the late George
T. Betts, contain the factors essen
tial to hastening the “live-at-home”s
program mentioned in my previous
discussion. Tried in the hard school
of experience and subjected to the
‘acid test, these plans already have}
added many millions of dollars in
new wealth to the agricultural pro-J
duction of Georgia and have brought
Ito the farmers and to the bankers
‘and merchants in many counties a
!surplus from food and feed crops, in‘
fa'ddition to the food and feed neces
|sary to maintain the home popula
{tion. Indeed, there is a group of
,counties in Georgia, numbering, per-“
haps, 15 to 25, that represent a
'higher production per acre of money
income than can be found anywhere
else in the United States in a similar
number of counties. In each and
every case this prosperity is due to
the following of the Cow-Hog-Hen
| program and to a local org‘anizati\on
among merchants and bankers and
Ifarmers through whichk all work to-
Ig‘ether as a unit, not only along
| economic lines, but where the social
and civie requirements oi an active
rural community, ingluding schools,
churches, roads and recreational ad
vantages, are given careful and thor
oughly united and co-ordinated at
tention. '
Development of our own rural
communities along these lines under
plans that give incentive and oppor
tunity for our own native tenant
farmers gradually to become farm
owners, taken in connection with in
telligent plans for providing attrac
tive farm homes for outside farmers
experienced in diversified farming,
are combining to build up the morale
as well as the wealth in these com
munities. : |
What has been accomplished along
these lines has been due very largely
to the Georgia Association and the
propaganda which it has broadcasted
to the state and to the nation, and
these accomplishments have been due
to the support of that organiaztion
largely by business men. One of the
best years of service rendered to
Georgia by this organization was dur
ing the year when hundreds of mem
bers of the Atlanta Association of
Credit Men, together with bankers
and chambers of commerce joined
hands with rural communities to pro
vide field workers to visit different
sections and counties of Georgia to
help put across this program.
Business men of Georgia today,
recognizing as never before, the com
pelling importance of this program
to all industry and to all progress in
Georgia, can do no better than to
throw themselves as a unit behind
this Association and help in fihanc
ing it so as to meet the demands of
service in the field necessary to has
ten the “live-at-home’ goal for
Georgia.
One of the most helpful evidences
of an awakening on the part of
Georgia’s financial and business lead
ers to this need is the recent action
of Mr. J. K. Orr, one of the south’s
most widely-known and successful
manufacturers. Mr. Orr is appeal
ing to his customers throughout
Georgia and to his associates in At
lanta to do their bit in aiding toward
the solution of this basic and import
ant problem. The writer already has
discussed this problem with Mr. Orr
and has frankly advised him that the
simplest and most economical way by
which the business men of Georgia
ean aid in the solution of this all-im-‘
portant problem is to mobilize behindj
the Georgia Association, give it the|
benefit of their brains and advice, asl‘
well as ample financial assistance so,
that a sufficient force of competent
field men may keep in touch with
and organize rural communities and
back the field workers of our agri
cultural college and state departmentl
of agriculture and public forces un-,
til all of our rural communities shall'
be organized along sound social and;
economic lines and that the benefits
of cooperation both in production and
marketing of products produced:
sound farm programs, with sane and
SIXTY-FIVE WINERS
TRAPPED IN MINE BLAST
RESCUE PARTY QUICKLY OR
GANIZES AT ROCKWOOD,
TENNESSEE. |
Rockwood, Tenn.—A mine explo-:
sion three miles underground at the
Rogers entry of the Roane Iron Com
pany’s coal mine was reported to
have occurred this morning. Sixty
five miners are known to have been
working at that point and no word
had been received from them at noon
today. A rescue party has been or
ganized.
Bugene Tedder, a miner, first re
ported the explesion. He was about
two miles from the Rogers entry and
stated he had felt the for& of the
blast and smelled gasses from the
’explosion.
Deputy State Mine Inspector A. J.
;Holden was in Rockwood at the time
and accompanied the mine rescue
party which will make an invesiga
tion.
The Rockwood Iron Company early
this afternoon notified the United
States mine rescue district at Knox
ville of the explosion. J. M. Webb,
in charge of the district station, was
expected to come to Rockwood with
gas helmets and other mine-rescue
equipment. Mr. Webb did notable
rescue work during the last explosion‘
at the Rogers entry about two years
ago.
—_— |
The Bible Study Class will meet
with Mrs. O. W. Bell and Mrs. J. R.
Lifsey Monday, Oct. 11.
Mrs. M. P. Garner, Mrs. S. G.
Pryor, Jr., and Mrs. Harvey Mathis
of Fitzgerald spent Wednesday with
friends here.
Mrs. Roy Clark of Albany was
here Wednesday.
Miss Kate Harrison of Ft. Myers,
Fla., spent Thursday here en route
ome from Atlanta.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Fountain spent
Monday in Vienna.
‘Mrs. Mary Zorn was the guest of
her sister, Mrs. Cora Parker of Pou
lan Tuesday.
Mrs. M. E. Freeman and daughter,
Miss Annie Lynn, spent a couple of
days last week with relatives in Moul
trie.
Miss Maggie Collier spent Satur
day with friends in Fitzgerald.
Misses Celestia Smith and Clarris
Maddox of Wesleyan College spent
the week-end with their parents here.
Messrs. O. W. Smith, Y. J. Stover
and W. T. Williams spent Wednesday
in Doerun on business.
.Dr. Jake Luke of Miami, Fla., was
here several days last week. |
Mrs. L. W. Green and W. T. Hum
phreys were in Cordele Thursday.
Rev. and Mrs. T. E. Murray and
Miss Burma Harris visited relatives
in Thomasville Friday and Saturday.
Mr. W. T. Smith of Griffin spent
the week-end with his parents, Prof.
and Mrs. J. W. Smith.
Mr. R. W. Fountain was in Fitz
gerald Friday.
Mr. D. P. Little of Ocilla was here
Sunday.
Mrs. W. D. Fountain, Mrs. Litt
Warren and daughter, Miss Blonnie
and Mrs. W. T. Williams were shop
ping‘ in Albany‘ Friday.
Miss Leila Bell and Roy Morick of
St. Augustine, Fla., are the guests of
relatives here.
Mrs. C. D. Vandergriff of Jackson
ville, Fla., is the guest of her mother,
Mrs. A. T. Smith. ‘
Miss Jewel Williams of Fitzgerald
spent Sunday afternoon with her pa
rents. e
Mrs. Ralph Fountain was in Tifton
Saturday.
Mr. Glisson, the popular salesman
%of home-raised garden seed, was here
‘Saturday.
Mrs. J. C. Means and Mrs. M. F.
Whidden spent Saturday in Tifton.
Mrs. A. D. Mashburn left Satur
day to join her husband at Council,
Ga., where they will make their fu
ture home.
Messrs. Albert Jenkins and Rich
ard Smith spent the week-end in Ma
con.
sound credit advantages, may be
brought in the shortest time to the
aid of every community of Georgia.
The Georgia business man who leads
out in the way and to the end here
indicated will write his name high
upon Georgia’s roll of real patriots.
Mother!
Watch cfl}i}; Tongue
“California Fig Syrup” is
Children’s Harmless
Laxative
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When your child is constipated, bil
fous, has colic, feverish-breath, coated
tongue, or diarrhea, a teaspoonful of
genuine “California Fig Syrup” sweet
ens the stomach and promptly cleans
the bowels of poisons, gases, bile, sour
ing food and waste. Never cramps:or
overacts., Contains no n;rcotics d:-‘
soothing drugs. Children love:its de
udmi:‘ — gist f 'Call:
Ask your druggist for genuine “Calf
fornia F:g Syrup” which has full di
rections for babies and children of
all ages, gla.inly printed on bottle.
Mother! You must say “California”
Or you may get an imitation fig syrup.
New honey in the comb or extract
ed, $2.00 gallon.
Six gallon lots or more, $l.BB per
gallon.
Produced exclusively from clovers.
Quality guaranteed.
State whether comb or extracted
is wanted when ordering.
THE BUSY BEE APIARY
| BUFORD, GEORGIA 3
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TAB A R
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G AL eI
G = weiciers
W WRIG gy ‘l"_B!}/é'-i‘"gI’,"m
LY Ty o,
At o g
LK -:.::/, /
Wrigley’s Chewing Sweet
helps teeth, mouth, throat
and digestion in a delightful
and refreshing way. Removes
odors of smoking and eating.
People of refinement use it.
Gl3O
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(v G KEon
Macon, Georgia o
October 14th, to 23rd, Inclusive, 1926
THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS OFFERED
IN PREMIUMS -
(SEND FOR CATALOG)
Big Agricultural Displays from all sections of Georgia.
Wonderful Poultry Show, Unusual Live Stock Exhibits,
Farm Machinery, Georgia Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs, Wo
man’s Domestic Work, Flower Show, Art Displays,
Etc., Etc.
GEORGIA VOCATIONAL SCHOOLS DISPLAY
GEORGIA BOY SCOUTS EXHIBITS
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT EXHIBITS
Great Midway of Amusements and Wonderful Free
Acts Entertainment Program Day and Night
POLOCK’S WORLD AT HOME' SHOWS
FAMOUS WHIPPET DOG RACES
SOMETHING DOING EVERY DAY
OH, BOY! WHAT A FAIR
“ It will be moonlight nights in Georgia. All
roads lead to Macon and reduced rates on
railroads. Don’t miss this Big Fair.
IN THE HEART OF GEORGIA
GEORGIA STATE EXPOSITION
E. G. Jacobs, President E. Ross Jordan, Sec.-Mgr.
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SAVE witk
Ratyoarz 2
DRUG STORE
7 T .
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Bz
BT
| Sirics
ZINC STEARATE
Will do more than any other
one thing to add to Baby’s com
fort and happiness.
No more soreness or chafing;
Puretest Zinc Stearate 25c
sheds water.
Denmark Drug Co.
7he Rexalls sure
FITZGERALD, GA.
° o *
Keep Eliminative
o
System Active
Good HealthßequiresGood Elimination
ONE can't feel well when there is
a retention of poisonous waste
in the blood. This is called a toxic
condition, and is apt to make one
tired, dull and languid. Other symp
toms are sometimes toxic backaches
and headaches. That the kidneys are
not functioning properly is often
shown by scarity or burning passage
of seccretions. Many people have
learned the value of Doan’s Pills, a
stimulant diuretic, when the kidneys
seem functionally inactive. Every
where one finds enthusiastic Doan’s
. users. Ask your neighbor!
DOAN’S P
60c
Stimulant Dizxretic to the Kidneys
Foatcr-Milb&rn Co., Miz. Chem., Euffalo, N. Y.
Uses simple home treatment
Goes to work next day
While working on the deck of a steamer
at Sparrows Point, Md., Lewis H.
Niemyer, of Baltimore, Md., tripped
over a rope and sprained his ankle.
“Twenty minutes later, I could
hardly walk with a cane,” he writes.
“That night I got a bottleof Sloan’s
Liniment, and to the surprise of all
the boys in the shop, I' was at work
next morning.”
It is remarkable—the help that
Sloan’s gives to a sprain. Just a little
of this remarkable liniment lpat;ted
lightly on, and you begin to feel relief.
Right to the place that hurts it
brings the fresh healing blood—build
ing up theinjured tissues. Theswelling
and inflammation go down, the pain
stoi:s. Get a bottle today and haveit
on hand. All druggists—3s cents.
Sloan’s
Liniment
KILLS PAIN ]