The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, June 12, 1913, Image 3
Refrigerabrs, fee Boxes and Freezers
Aremoving hvdv now.
Caß-and make your selection as early as you can, ar-dbigin to-enjoy H
Why not have it for the-entire Summer?
Don’t wait tffl tthe hot weather is half gone.
|f TBl®,fl
I ||Fri 0 WHI T E i s
(| : I MOUNTAINS. -W
raEEzm 1
Jffif ■.■'■ / Eh jHK 'De-you know that- the ice j
nF? j/RBKW- rtl > i u HI a ~■tte-n '.cream wide with a White Moun- ;
I- Wil lain [Freezer is the easiest, cheap-: i
j' I »o f ,| est'healtnest and most nourishing
/ fir | dessert.'that you can make.
Jr Jr f r — l> If you will follow the
1 , v 1 J<4lg)T that corase-.with
TjEey Jffe made of the right ma- ewery White ’Mountain Freeatt, you
"'ZZ'''' cans mraike iintforar minutes the .wooth
terial, and made right. 1 est. fiwsbgrainM most debars ice
1 . cream whomever,tasted. Its the asnique
V triple nrootiont of i.the White Mountain
We maLe you a SPECIAL price. | Freezer tfhatddoes it. Ask a
I White Mcontain ’ Freezer.
1
PALMOUR HARDWARE W
I Prepare for Summer
I .. 1.JL.,.. _T_ jmw II 1 "“JUL ■■ - ■«'=-! . ■■-■! .■„..—J'i * ym.
. p II WSt L, ;
Spring is Here
And we are ready to serve you .
! with your needs for the Season! j
—j
I OUR STOCK OF
I ...■—., — - -----
! Oil Stoves Refrigerators I
; Water Coolers Ice cream Freezers
Zj Lawn Mowers Etc., Etc.
/ I
i *_ _■■■ ..." I
Is fuller Now than Ever Before!
-
C | Buy now and get Ready Before Hot Weather! |
1 ALLEN BROS.
LFT US WRITE YOUR
FIRE. LIFE, ACCIDENT, and HEALTH
INSURANCE
rongest ana Best Companies on Earth
ive an Attractive and New Proposition on Insurance
HAM & THOMAS
E 302 - 8-9 GRANITE BLDG
To Cure a Cold ia One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stops the
Cough and Headache and works off the Cold.
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure.
E. W. GROVE’S signature on each box. 25c.
PARKER'S [
m HAIR BALSAM
Clesniet and beautifies the bar*>
Promotes * luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Prevents hair falling.
Gray’s Sweet powders for
Children. ’ ’
[ Reliew Feverishness. Bad Stomach, Teeth
ing Disorders, move and regulate the Bow
elsand are a pleasant remedy for Worms.
Used by Mothers for ±! years. They never
fail. At all druggists. 26c. Sample FREE.
Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
FiS®aranteed dßczema Remedy.
’The . burning, redness'’
Tiish ;>ud ■ is®2reeable effects of e<--
: zema. ter. .-.r’-Ks o rheum, it-.u
and irr.itaXing-s.kin eruptions can be
readily enre-d and the *kin nr«.<h'
! clear a»d-smooth with Dr. Hobson s
J£czeu’.i«. ■Otetinent. Mr. J. C. -Eve
land, <:•€ 34&th.’ 111., says: tx l had ec-
I zema years avd ’had
j tried every tiling. All failed. When
I foiled Dr Hobson’s? Eczema Oint
ment I found a cure."” This oint
meut-is the formula of a physician
and Iws been in use for
an ex-perinaent. That a« why we can
guarantee'it. All druggists, or-by
mail. iPF?ee 50c. SheafferflChemioal
Co., ?\hile.delphia and St. Xsouis.
For Sstle.fcy M. C. Bro-wn and Pied
' most Drug Co..
Naturae’s Method of -Protection.
Thene Jhave been brought to light
an astonishing number of forms of
fish, and especially of prawns of a bril
liantly snfc color, living, in 'the ocean
at a oepf-ji of 3,000 . feet, but, aston
ishing :aa:jt may seem, These brilliant
ly colereil fish and praswna, . instead of
being conspicuous in the water at.
that depth, are nearly invisible, when
almost ag; other color could be easily
seen.
Cari ’t Keqp it Secret.
The splendid work of Chamber
slain's TahJets is daily .becoming
acre widely known. No suoh grand
t remedy tfor stomach .and liver
Mtroubles teas ever been kaawa. For
■ieale by arilodealers.
<B>ne Bright Spot.
/An English clergyman was '’Visiting
’tes parisliMEiers, when cnei-of-them, an
,<d .woman., informed him tthat
irtiey met ‘‘teie'd gone through -a sight;
a) 5< trouble. ? Heilsister was tidesaX, aad
itbere wor.a- worle job t&ax rthat —the
jpjg died all<e ’ a sudden; 'butnit!pleased
rthe Lord tot tak’ him, aa«3 "they mun
bow, they umn bow.”
told lady brightened up, ami?«aid: "But
Ihere's one jftiing, Mester,Allen, as I
•eaih say, and nought to say, tlhei Lord’s
Hmoi? pretty well on my side Ahis .win
ter l£or; greens.”
Meers and Skin Trembles
01.\y-ou are «>wjffering with . any okl-
or fewer, sores. Bal«er-«, boiln,
eeeenaaor others skin troubles, .get a
fc-ox <ofißuckleh « Arnica Salve and
yoiis \wlill get relief proiffij.->tly. Mrs.
Br®<ee JJones, o£ 'Birmingharn, Ala.,
suffered I‘roin auwgly uleer for nine I
Buelklen’s Ahaica Halve <!
I cured the?, in two weeks. Will help
you. Only 25c. Kecommejaded by
AI. C. Brown and Piedmont J)rug
d ’oinpapy.
Rerrarnte&ence fstoi Pleasing.-
"Once while canva®sing hie stalte
during a snolitical season, John Quipey
Adgms wo® by a well-to
do f armer,, who introefciced himself
and vsaid: '“Mr. Adams., I’m glad -to
meet you.; tiny wife remembers you 1
.well; she was your family whep
you were a boj, and often combed
X’ur htir.” “Weroj” said 3dr. Adamq,
sharply, “I suppose she ciynbts yours
now:.”
Chaimbitrlain’s Colic, Cho/era
and Diarrhoea Remedy.
Every family without exception ,
“hould keep this preparation at hand
du ring the hot weather of the summer
months. Chamberlain's Colic. Chol
era and Diarrhoea Kemedy is we-rth
many times its cost when needed
and is almost certain to be needed
before the summer is over. It has.;
no superior for the purposes for,
which it is intended. Buy it now.
For sale by all dealers.
Best Laxative for the Aged
Old men and women feel the need
of a Laxative more than young folks,
but it must be safe and harmless and
one which will not cause pain. Dr.
King's Xew Life Pills are especially
good for the aged, for they act
promptly and easily. Price 25c.
Recommended by 51. C. Browa and
Piedmont Drug Co.
- - b
Scientific Gardening in England.
By the use of French gardening
metrods, relying largely upon hotbeds
and glass jars in the colder months,
single acres of ground near London
are being made to yield from $2,400
to $3,000 in vegetables annually.
Tjhere is a product to market through
out the year- Melons, little grown in
England, are forced by a steady tern*
perature of 90 degrees, generated by
znanure.
Take Plenty of Time to Eat.
There is a saying* that “Rapid
eating is slow suicide.” If you have
formed the habit of eating too rap
idly you are most likely suffering
from indigestion or constipation,
which will result eventually in seri
ous illness unless corrected. Diges
tion begins in the mouth. Food
should be thoroughly masticated
and insalivated. Then when you
have a fullness of the stomach or
feel dull and stupid after eating,
take one of Chamberlain's Tablets.
Many severe cases of stomach
trouble and constipation have been
cured by the use of these tablets.
They are easy to take and most
agreeable in effect. For sale by all
dealers
THREE RULES TOR HAPPINESS
Celebrated Neurologist Tells Students
to "Play Ban. Get Busy and
'Saw Wood.”
Dr. George X. Walton, the Trcnrol
ogist, lectured recently at the Har
vard Medical school on how to live
through a life of happiness rather
than. of fret and fears.
He 53 id the present time wras a less
emotional pmod than that of fifty
vears ago, that there was still
much nervousness. If there were,
less -®f argument, swearing and fret
ting. and more willingness to listen
to criticism in a -sane manner, there
woisd be few cases of nervous pros
tration, lee said.
The workingman should come
home -each day tired sand happy, in
stead of tired 3ind cross, Dr. AValton
declared. Ffe thought that £he pool
ing of 5-nonnous wealth was a fore
runner of 'the doom of
The dhild es todry, he said, after
crawling in its'crib, has discarded
the‘“Slow 3 lay rae down to sleep”
in favor off **Don’t mention death to
me <or Iwa hlie. swake all night.”
Three rules sor happiness laid
dow by The doctor were: “Don’t
harbor a'grouch',” “Don’t live in the’
' pasC and “Don’t play ■ the martyr.”
i His Savored rules for;a life of al
s most ainalloyed bliss.awe: “Play ballj,
get tansy amd shew woofi .”
BOY MDKLiD CONAN DOYLE
Sis Rewarited ffrr' inttawce of Sherlock,
Hettnvsß TFiatent ami ’Then Pulls
I*ewsp9per.
: I
•, The told by the
Ic’rench xweekly, 117 Opinion :
“As (G®nan GSMyle was enter
ing the Cterhton Hertel;.a boy said to
lb m:
i ““rhe-dhah duet on your clothes:
'srfhows yt» Shave 'been playing bil
iEitttrds; tffbe ffact <df iits not having
jbieen remawfi sdhowß -you were tired,
laifiter a lc®g jgEPne ;)yoitr frown shows
that you Eoet:; your boots is
stainsed wi&h Fhiho mud; yet you do
not .bend wort legs in walking like
professionals.
'conclude that you
■■ disproved the -anahteur billiards cham
« piondiip at the tQrme rooms this aft
-1 ernomi;...and that’jou.ilsst.’
“The noxv-list” continues the
French with
jfth’c' •-- —“ : - jJ ID 1 ’
ent mat the boy a sovereign.
Tfiereupccn the youngster pulled out
of his pocket aueopy of an .evening
pa>er giving S\r Arthur’s photo
graph and «a fu]t\ description <of the
mateh.”
•HAS COFFIN FOR SALE.
A bristake a word has caused'a
'Kilkenny (Ireland) philanthropist
to find himself with a’ coffin on his
hands. He ordered it at the earnest
request of the relatives of a poor old
body reported to have died in the
workhouse, to save her the indignity
of a paupers burial. When it tvas
taken -to the workhouse, however, the
supposed corpse was found smoking
a pipe and quite convalescent. The
doctor, it seems, had written “acids”
after the old woman’s name for the
guidance of the nurse, and the near
est the workhouse master womld come
t-o deciphering the professional cal
ligraphy was “dead/ - ’ Hence the no
tification of the graven and the ether
funeral arrangements—all of y/kjeh
were countermanded except fee
coffin.
PUZZLED BOY.
Willie—Pa, what are ancestors?
Father—Wei], I am one of yours.
Your grandpa i« another.
Willie—Oh ! Then why is it that
folks brag about them?—London
Opinion.
STATUS QUO.
Maud—Does Kitty love Jack well
enough to marry him?
Marie —Oh, yes; but Jack believes
in letting well enough alone.
COULD BUT DID NOT WANT TO.
“Tired ? And you said you could
die dancing!”
“I could. And I would, if I
danced with you much longer.”
DRAWBACK.
"I have, alas! a sunny lot.”
“Why do you repine about that?”
“Because most suburbanites want
shady ones.”
THE RIVALS.
“What will the horse say now to
the cry that the auto is king ?”
“I think his say is likely to be
neigh, neigh.”
CHECK YOUR BABY
Here Is Something New For
Big National Conserva
tion Exposition
BIG CHILD WELFARE EXHIBIT
bliss Julia C. Lathrop, One of Country’s
Most Noted Women, at Head of This
Department for Knoxville Show
Every Mother Will Be Interested in
Exhibits.
“Check your baby, madame?”
This is going to be one of the queries
tl«at will be heard frequently during
the progress of the big National Con
servation Exposition in Knoxville,
Tenn. The exposition will throw open
its gates on September 1 and will con
tinue until November 1.
The “Baby Checking Department”
will be only one of the many novel
d>ings that the progressive men and
women in charge of the Child Welfare
Exhibit will arrange for the exposition.
The question asked above and answer
e".i affirmatively does not mean that
iaby will be checked, tagged and then
pv in an .oblong compartment like &.
suit case, father, it will mean that
Ibahy will bse taken in charge by com
petent nurses and well cared for.
There is going to be a “babies’ 1
roem' in the Child Welfare .Building
at the. National Conservation Exposi
tion, ai room, well lighted, airy, screen
ed and daintily furnished. There will!
be plenty of room for the children to
.Tomjsamd play; there will also be cozy
•rest rooms, where the little ones can
«leep when their eyes become heavy
•and their little legs tired.
’Experience has shown that many
mothers, rather than miss the show,
■sudh «s the National Conservation Ex
position will- be must bring the little
•ones. The management of the expo
j'SitioD welcomes the children. It wants
| <every ichild to see the wonders on dis
play. But at the same time the wom
en in -charge of the Child Welfare De-
I partment realize how necessary it is
to bane a place. where mother can
/leave the children. So the “Baby
l fT ; "in!
asßibM
GIFFORL PINCi-iCT,
Conservationist and head of National
Advisory Board of National Ccnser
-1 vaticn Exposition.
Checking Department.” It will be a
place where mother can leave the chil
dren and rest assured of the fact that
they will be having the best kind of a
time, and that they will be locked
after every minute of the day.
Eaby Health Contest.
It is also proposed that in the Child
Welfare Building there shall be a
“baby Health Contest.” The one ob
ject of this contest will be to set up
a standard'of health for the babies.
The absurd features —too often cruel —
of many baby shows will be done away
with by this feature. The Babies’
Clinic of Knoxville has agreed to co
operate in the “Baby Health Contest.”
Here is the way in which it will be
cairied on: First, there will he a stand
arl score card. Then the physical de
velopment of the child is compared
with the score card, and a certificate
or medal is given in accordance with
the facts. There is no competition be
tween babies, but only the effort to
reach a standard. But the very pur
pose of the Child Welfare Department
of the exposition would not be served
unless there were something further.
There will be advices to mothers offer
ed by competent men and women.
Thus the child will be benefited and
also the parents.
These are only two of the many fea
tures that will form a part of the ex
hibits in the Child Welfare Building at
the exposition. Miss Julia C. Lathrop,
chief of the the Children’s Bureau of
the United States Department of La
bor and one of the most noted women
in the country, is in full charge of the
plans and preparations that are being
made for these exhibits. Miss Lathrop
was for many years associated with
Miss Jane Addams in the splendid
werk that is being done by the Hull
House settlement in Chicago.
TO INTEREST CHILDREN.
The one aim and object of the man
agers of the National Conservation Ex
position in Knoxville in arranging for
a Child Welfare Exhibit is to teach val
uable lessons to the parents of chik
dren and to the children themselves.