Newspaper Page Text
Stop That Kidney
Trouble Now
V n?r y/ *I. _, F>'i
■ jtH 3 a t,}?/ HNS
VOL.' 13.
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S i aWF^^AWV s ... ou jn anyquaF
tity. Corn, Oats a; Ha^, and Meat,
V Bacon and Lard, G : -ids Seed Oats,
Flour a Specialty'.
These goods come to u in carload lots.
BouJht for cash and sold for cash,
therefore I am prepared to save you
some money- Call and see me and
I’ll do the rest-
Harley H. Dukes
Phone 11 Pembroke, Ga.
fSay, You!
<; )
HOVi about that printing
job you're in need of?
Come in and see us about
it at your first opportunity.
Don't wait until the very
last moment but give us a
little time and we'll show
you what high grade work
we can turn out
id —_—a
-
Send Your Sobscripiion
TI PPISP
I J— -
Sallie Clanton
Pressing Club
General Repairing
Your Work Solicited
PEMBROKE, GA
Subscribe to this paper.
Don’t Take It U
For Granted
that just because you are in i
business, everybody is aware
of the fadt. Your goods may j
be the finest in the market i
but they will remain on your i
shelves unless the people are '
told about them.
ADVERTISE
if you want to move your
, merchandise. Reach the
buyers in their homes through
the columns of THIS PAPER
j and on every dollar expended
: you’ll reap a handsome
■ dividend. H
• - IBROKE. BRYAN COV^J ■ ' . GAI, ... . . . ;.
: * •
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IL
Began Reading It Again.
Mrs. Croft was a country girl aid
life in the city had been hard on bar.
And there had been no children.
And ever the memory of Mlldnd
Carter swept over him like a flowl
tide, and by that sweet memory le
had tried to live and fought dovn
the rising bitterness in his heart, i
At last his wife and he had resolvtd
upon a temporary separation. It wfs
not to be permanent; they were Uo
sincerely fond of each other to drear
of anything like that Rather ft was
to be a period of adjustment in whicl),
each, alone, could examine his an I
her heart and see wherein the ol
I sense lay. Then his wife’s second left
ter had come, in which she had diaa
nosed the. trouble accurately. It wad
not their love which was at. fault, but
the conditions of their life, and love
must be strong enough to overleap
those artificial barriers.
Hut Mildred! John Croft had never
ceased to dream of his first love. If
those years could be wiped out. once
more! He saw her now as he sat
musing in his study, passing down
the village street, swinging her sun
bonnet; he saw the shy, quick glance
that she would cast up at him. He
had those letters that she had writ
ten to him, breathing so many hopes,
in the drawer of his desk. He had
never destroyed those; they were
sacred to him.
His wife would not return for three
days. Why, then, should he not go
to her, to Clayton, the village of their
birth, and see her as she was now, re
call the thousand memories of their
love, steep his soul in those passion
ate memories which would encourage
him to take up the burden of life
anew? He sat down at his desk and
wfote her a letter of a thousand en
dearments. He was coming back to
Clayton, he said. Would she meet
him just at the. place where they used
to meet, at the bottom of the garden
dividing the two cottages? Apd would
she wear that sunbonnet? And would
she forget the years that had escaped
and pretend that they were boy and
girl together again in Clayton?
No sooner had he posted that let
ter than the plan became overwhelm
ing in its insistence. He thrust a
few things into his suitcase, descend
ed in the elevator, hailed a taxicab,
and was on his way to the station. He
was singing as he entered the broad j
marble portals. The ticket agent I
\ I fr h '. - i t.
^?u..z. ... \. o
' ?y'
I VW 'GONTEST-
HE LA . OF fcOMINATIOP-.S
S > ' ' J
0 Is your name or that oi;
I'your friendsritten there? i
kJ H cu - 3MI fug to enter, so i
w nothing is gained by delay.!
g ; Begin nmg with this issue of'
lp' ie Enterprise:,we inaugurate'
I The)
I 1 *
1 V ■■
?, well wort !i yopr • ■!' Tts to win
Lhb cmitest a EieiiKin
u ! 3 ; i i . 0 1 par-
; tics ... ;y J.»y ins'’ri ng Ei irnes;;
;id : . I. eon sv. I wo!i re-
• ■
P "• tion oi’Ai. ■ eodifenw
'hiahle i>; : ”
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iG),
IT ; ‘I ' - } ,
V i? «. noon, wiih his usual
j '.iff daring, he entered a Broad-
JKury choplipuse one Muldoon’s—and
.■ordered a modest meal. But he had
rp idea how he would pay for this,
mthal. Perhaps he would leave his hat
or 'bools In pledge for it. As he pon
dered the matter, he noticed that the
waiters, - ho were staring at him odd
ly, )were all Irishmen. Were the walt
ers\aware of his lack of funds? His
luncjheon seemed strangely long in
cording. Hut just, then a waiter bent
ower him and whispered:
IT beg pardon, sir, but are you the
patriot Meagher?"
Now, Meagher, Labouchere knew,
hai^l aided Smith O'Brien In his Irish
rising, had been deported to Australia,
and had escaped thence to New York.
Thej ready young man, in answer to
I the (waiter’s question, put his forefin
i ger upon his lip. "Hush,” he mur
। mured. And he looked round the
i room cautiously.
1 It was at once felt that Labouchere
was the patriot Meagher. And so the
1 choicest wines were set before him,
and, in place of the modest chop he
’ had ordered, a luncheon of nine or
! ten elaborate courses was brought on.
■ At the end, lighting one of the es-
L tablishment’s finest cigars, Labouch
-5 ere demanded his bill. His waiter
3 smiled, retired, and soon came back
। with a big, handsome man —the pro
'prietor himself. The proprietor, bend- j
f ing over the youth, said earnestly:
! “From one like you, a sufferer in
1 the good cause, I can take no money.
1 It has been a privilege to serve you,
' sir. Permit a brother patriot to shake
' you by the hand.”
And Labouchere shook hands with :
the proprietor and with the dozen
। waiters and stalked forth into the cold i
, world with the stern, sad, but indo- ■
mitablo look which it seemed to him :
that an exiled patriot should wear.
I
First Derby In 1780.
All England is at present talking
• over the coming Derby, in which
there are several American entries.
This famous stake was instituted i
by Lord Derby in 1780 and takes i
places on Epsom Downs in Surry,
England. It is generally run on the
Wednesday in the week preceding
Whitsuntide. the fifteenth day after
Easter, which is the second day of
the meeting.
The Derby, which is run over a
course of one and one-half miles, is
at present a stake of SIO,OOO, of which
<5,000 goes to the winner, $2,500 to
the nominator of the same, $1,500 to
the second horse and SI,OOO to the
third.
Epsom Downs is a small market
town, where races were first estab
lished in 1711. The grand stand at
the course there was built in 1829 at
a cost of SIOO,OOO, and accommo-
i dates 7,500 persons seated.
| g LOCAL HAPPENING S
CAUGHT on THE CURB t
’ B'rin at tlw loginning of the
; K.X rEIiI'KISE'S Col test.
! Prosh Groceries at. till times tit
। 8. B. Smith’s
I>r. Jenkins Sims spent Monday
in Savannah.
j Block’s, Candies can be had at
i’enibrokc- Drug < d,
Mr. I’erty iionaldson spent
Monday in Savannah.
. lardwai.’, Harness, Buggies
1 gum Wagons, s. B. Smith.
| Mr. B. L. Jordan spent the
week-end in Giennville.
' thin t knock your home town
; Inn knock the fellow who does.
ar. dates ‘hi ve, of ; ovai.nah,
■. vioteil his mother Ie ;■> this week.
I ’i r. mu' /: rs i; !,\ ,'g :
' spent Sunday with M-s. Ws.a'A
'O C >' -■ ’
A ■■ ...
.sntTiKlay.
B st Bridie in th? world for the !
money.—Barmers Supply amJ
A’ra iiiiig Co.
Or. and Mrs. 1 S. Availing!
spent Sunday in Cojim; the gw :■'■
yd friends and rcla i\ i.
/■ <’. I »
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i d r ■ -T - ■ | •„ , . . <wi' -d
1 < A.A- HA ’ ■ w sfc®
A' . ! -i n f d. AA .
4 W- -wr ^„. ..
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Ge/The Hab/f
And Patronize the
Pembroke Drug Co.
I \
YOU get Highly Carbonated
Soda Fountain Drinks, and,
at the same time, music while
you wait.
IF you use Cigars, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco
you will also enjoy any tiling in this line that
comes from our store, because we first consider
quality, and this we have in this line. If its a pipe
and pipe cleaner, we have them. You will also find
that we handle nothing but the best of high quality
Drugs, Drug Sundries, Chemicals, Etc.
Prescription Work a Specialty
Acuracy and Purity
You will also find garden and farm seeds in our
store at all times
Live and Let Live
Our Motto
1
Pembroke Drug Co'ny
Local and Long Distance Telephone Connections
DAY ’PHONE 30 NIGHT ’PHONE 10
Pembroke, Georgia
q - - - — -I=^ a
A. S. BACON
Agent for Consumers Monument Company
OF BALL GROUND, GEORGIA
If you arc contemplating purchasing a Monument or Tombstone
figure with me before buying—my prices are right. I am a
farmer ami am not depending on the profits from this agency
for a living and can therefore make you close prices.
Thin Blood, Bad
Health
Nyal’s BW !? 3 7iy
■ —
NUMBER' 21
’A farmers in and around Bern
laoke have been taking advantage
of tho beautiful weather of the
[past week by preparinig theirs
s ”il for planting.
The I'LvTEKPiitsE has on a cam
paign m which women wih vote as
same as tho mem. The campm: n
‘s a votirg contest. A Gram’ I n
J ,;j >t Bnmo will be given t.., the
lady* receiving the most v,d ?s .
3 will 1 " given on subscrip
tions, advertising and job work.
We not only gi ve votcs f , r IK , W
subscriptions but tihso cm c >llect-
imid two vear; Iwhiml !• > <
L’ '
1 • ; ' i r ri :•• j''v • • r - - /
I*' •. 'will v t ■
j *Ade a num iv"
i' 11 ' lll ' 1
l S-’IU
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