The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, June 12, 1913, Image 7

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Sleep that Refreshes Depends largely on the mattress fl' .Lii | , iT/1 ib] 1 you buy. The mattress must be of 1 • I UUqJ H uniform thickness, gently elastic to S'l f conform to the body lines, at the I’r-' same ti me supporting the sleeper without pressure. M The Princess Mattress * s ma <ie cotton woven by our specially designed / ’ 'jrlll machinery’ into layers of light fluffy felt, one layer /niVlil pl upon the other to insure uniformity of vctFTtt X/ Afl thickness. It weighs full 50 pounds, and isen- C /' 'fl cased in ticking artistic in design-plain stripe or /i/ll ViiiiAVir/ fancy—of durable quality. I 1H w ' Ours * s °^ est » largest and best equipped I I 1 11 lil I $_ /I I factory in the south for the manufacture of mat- FiH fl VWnJnrD I lUI tresses. <. THE PRINCESS is our specialty. We i' U | (111 sell it under a6O night’s trial, promising to refund ** 7J’m SO ’I Jf / ! I 111 your money if you are not satisfied. We are safe ‘ 111| in doing this because we employ none but expert nuggy, mamma. workmen of long experience who make THE f , I PRINCESS by hand in a large, well lighted, j no. 4 thoroughly ventilated factory. * a flu J 1 If ft Ask your dealer. He should be able to supply you. If not, <)K J A yv Q write direct to us. Be sure you are informed before you buy. Gliolstin-Ciinningliam. Springbed Co. Ry PHI TP Manufacturers ATLANTA, GA. MATTRESS Q- Gainesville Midland Railway Schedule Time Table No. 9, Dec. 22, 1912. LEAVE GAINESVILLE No. 1 —daily 9.20 a. m No. 3—daily 4.35 p. m Ao- 11 —Daily except Sunday 2.30 p. in ARRIVE GAINESVILLE £°- 9.15 a. m No. 4—Daily 4.30 p . m No. 12 —daily except Sunday 12.25 p. m p^,.— C. H. MARTIN, ■jOBBRA'A Livery FeedandSale sfafefes - Hauling Draying, Grading ' Done Promptly. 7. Nice line of Carriages, Buggies | / and Riding Horses. _/ & Carriages for Funerals. N. Bradford Sr. Near Square Make Your Own Paint You can make, or have your painter make, seven <7) gallons of PURE LEAD, ZINC AND LINSEED OIL PAINT, by ad ding 3 gallons of LINSEED OIL at the price of LINSEED OIL, to 4 eailons of L. & M. SEMI-MIXED BEAL PAINT. The 3 gallons of Oil cost aboutS 1.95 Lhe 4 gallons of L. & M. Paint cost about 8.00 The 7 gallons of paint will then costS 9.95 THIS XX tLL BE ABOL I 51.42 PER GALLON. If you only need a few gallons of paint, then buy 3 quarts of Oil to add to each gallon of the L. de M. LEMI-MIXED REAL PAINT. YOU SAVE ABOUT bO CENTS A GALLON. FOR SALE BY M. C. BROWN. GEORGIA SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY The Graduates of this leading engineering institute are always in demand. They ere always well versed in the advanced courses in Mechanical, Electrical, Textile and Civil Engineering, Engineering Chemistry, Chemistry and Arc/iifecfure. Fifteen Free Scholarships from each County in Georgia Preparedness for real teaching, including new equipment for Shop, Mill and Laboratories. New Hospital. New Shop Building, Dormi tories. Splendid New Y. M. C. A. Cost reasonable. Climate healthful. Environments excellent. Largest and most complete athletic field in the South. Write for catalog. K. G. Maths so n 3 LL. D., Pres. Atlanta, Ga. C. A. DOZIER Real Estate And Insurance No. 1 State Bank Bldg. L Will be glad to sell to you, or for you, and will insure your property in the very best Companies at the lowest rates possible. COME TO SEE ME C A DOZIER —III IIIII' II III! I The Great Antiseptic Reliever for MAN and BEAST. MEXICAN Mustang Liniment ' Emergency Remedy fcr Farmers, Stock-raisers and Household. i use. Speedily relieves Spavins, Swin ney, Harness Sores and (jails, Shoe Boils, Strains and Lameness in Horses: Caked Udder and Sore Teats in Cattle and Ailments cf Poultry. SAFE AND SURE. Being made of oils it soaks down straight to the bone, banishes pain and saves suffering. Only oil lini ments can soak through muscle and tissue. Alcohol liniments evaporate before they can be absorbed by the flesh besides they are dangerous when used near a fire or lamp. Mexican Mustang Liniment will not burn even though a lighted be applied. Mexican Mustang Lin iment is THE SAFE as well as the SURE-TO-CURE remedy. COMMENDED BY A FARMER. Greensboro, Ga- As long ago as I can remember 1 have known of Mustang Liniment. I al ways keep it in my house and if any of my family get injured in any way, such as sprains, cuts, bruises, and, in fact, in many accidents that happen I always use Mus tang Liniment. On my horses and stock Ine ver think of using anything else—it is far cheaper than doctors' bills. I com nend it to all farmers; it will keep their iaimlies and also their horses and stock in condition. \ ery truly vours, J. D. ANDREWS, farmer. FREE Send for '‘Prayer of a Hone." Large type . edition on card 7x9. Haoe circulated .ur,areas of thousands of this famous Hone’s Prayer. Eccry lover of horses nants one. LYON MFG. CO., 21 South Fifth St, BROOKLYN. N.Y PBESIDEHT OF NATIONAL CtMVOTN EMI6B jißr ' * Wu - Xk W ■KUaeafe zWRSi ■Mak ’ - *- ~ ’ ".Wjy dfet M'- MM" T. A. Wright, attorney and business man of Knoxville, wbo is one of the men directing affairs of South’s great show. Exposition Planned for Whole People and for Posterity The country is facing grave prob lems, the solution of which must come from a clear understanding of conditions, and immediate action. The work of man in dealing with the forests and soils, which were given for use, and not for abuse, may aptly be compared to the work of smaller forms of life, such as the boll-weevil and army worm. The great creator probably views it in this light. Devastation is apparent on every hand, in denuded hillsand galled and gullied fields. For this reason and for many others the National Conservation exposition to be held at Knoxville WILL EXPLOIT SOUTH National Conservation Exposition at Knoxville to Feature Mines and Minerals. Gov. James B. McCreary, of Ken tucky, has read so much about the National Conservation Exposition that is to be held in Knoxville, Tenn., dur ing the months of September and Oc tober, had become so much impressed with the magnitude of the exposition and its importance to the South as a whole that he recently called Dr. J. B. Hoeing, State Geologist, before him. “Dr. Hoeing,” the governor said in effect, “this exposition at Knoxville is going to be a big thing, a much bigger exposition for the South in every way than most people imagine. I am anx ious that you go down to Knoxville, look over the ground, see what is be ing done, and arrange for a state ex hibit of Kentucky minerals at the ex position. Kentucky can not afford to be unrepresented, I believe.” Dr. Hoeing came to Knoxville, mar veled at the work being done and at the work already accomplished. He went back Frankfort and made his report to Gov. McCreary. Kentucky will have its exhibit at Knoxville. xhe incident thus related is only one of a number of similar character ; that have occurred recently. Many : who could not see things aright before, ' have become convinced that the Na- i tional Conservation Exposition is to be in reality a national exposition, na tion-wide in scope, nation-wide in char acter. Ihe Lnited States government, through its different departments and bureaus, is taking a deep interest in I the success of the big undertaking, • and in no department probably more ’ than in the Department of Mines and ! Minerals. In the first place the managers of the i Exposition have taken into considera- • tion that the mineral resources of the ' Great New South are many and varied, that for richness of deposits there are nene just like them anywhere in the country, and they have taken into con sideration the fact that there is much j development work still to be done i among these mineral deposits. So a magnificent new building, white as ’ snow, as are all of the other buildings * of + he Exposition, is going uu. It will i be used exclusively for the display of I mines and mineral exhibits. Here the resources that mean so much to the South will be on display; ) here the lessons of how best to con serve these wonderfully rich re- ' sources will be taught; here the les sons of how best to protect the lives of those who go down in the mines as a means of earning a livelihood will ' be portrayed. next fall will mark a most impor tant slept in the world’s work. The exposition is of nation-wide 'importance, and timely, it will not be a celebration, like other large expositions. It looks forward — pointing the way to better condi tions. It is in line with the ad vanced thought of the day. It will stand second to no enterprise of recent years as an agency for the promotion of the general welfare. The great plans and purposes of this exposition are being carried out for the benefit of the whole peo ple and of posterity.—From state ment made by W. M. Goodman, Di rector General of Exposition. WOMEN AT WORK ! ! They Are Striving For Success of Na ; tional Conservation Exposition. Women all over the South are work ing heart and soul for the success of the National Conservation Exposition that will be held in Knoxville, Tenn., next September and October. The women will have a building on the exposition grounds devoted entire ly to them and to their interests. The building now in course of construction will be one of the handsomest and must striking in the group of exposi , tion structures. It is being built in the old Colonial style. The building was designed for the women; it is set apart for their use. In it will be shown hundreds and thou sands of things of interest to women, i The woman’s building will be primarily devoted to the display of various things embraced in that comprehen sive term —domestic science—and to the display of the arts and crafts in : which they will find delight and in-' struction. Mrs. Horace Van Deventer, of Knox ville, a daughter of Justice Lurton of the supreme court of the United States, is chairman of the woman’s board of the exposition and is devoting much of her time to the work. Mrs. Van Deventer is getting splendid as sistance from the women of other great Southern states. NO ADVANCE IN HOTEL RATES. Visitors to National Conservation Ex position To Be Well Treated. Those who are contemplating a visit to the National Conservation Exposi tion in Knoxville during the month of September and October of this year can make their plans assured of this fact: The rates at the Knoxville hotels will not be advanced while the Expo sition is on. This has too. often been rhe case in other cities where big na tional expositions have been held. It will not be the case in Knoxville. i FISH AND GAME EXHIBIT. Under the direction of John H. Wal lace, Jr., Game and Fish Commissioner of Alabama, an exhibit of fish and game for the National Conservation Exposition is being prepared. Audu bon societies are also co-operating in this work. GOOD ROADS LESSONS. I Good roads are necessary requisites i to the development of any country. 1 The necessity of good roads in the ' South will be set forth by a line of i exhibits at the National Conservation 1 Exposition in Knoxville this fall. HO! FOR KNOXVILLE National Conservation Expo '« sition To Be Big Event of the Year 1 i > SOUTH’S GLORY ON DISPLAY Exposition Will Be One of the “Differ, ent” Kind and Will Be Greater In All Ways Than Anything Ever Seen In This Section of United States Before. The National Conservation Exposi tion that will be held ‘tin the pictur esque city of Knoxvllle&from Septeup bar 1 to November 1, of the present year, will be the one big event of tbn year in the South. No meeting, no gathering, no con ference, no exhibition of any kind will overshadow in importance the Nation al Conservation Exposition. It will be national in scope, national in charac ter. The National Conservation Exposi tion has been planned along broad lines and is designed to teach the great lesson of the necessity of con serving the resources that nature has so bountifully bestowed on the coun try. More especially will the necessity of conserving the immense resources of the South be brought out and em phasized at the Exposition. Following are a few facts that give some idea of the magnitude and the aims of the National Conservation Ex position: The exposition plant represents an outlay of over $2,000,000. The site of the exposition is in the most beautiful park in the South —a park that nestles in the foothills of the great Smoky mountains, picturesque, rolling, green, highly improved. Eleven Big Buildings The exposition grounds embrace with lakes and drives over one hun dred acres. Never was a site for an exposition with more natural advantages chosen, never one better adapted to exposition purposes. Eleven large exposition buildings, modern, stately, snowy white, as well as a number of smaller buildings, will house this exposition. Railroads realize the importance of the exposition and are co-operating in every way in the enterprise. National leaders of conservation with Gifford Pinchot as chairman are directing the exposition. Sixteen Southern states have formed boards for exposition work and these boards are actively engaged in the col lection of comprehensive exhibits and in arranging state days for the expo sition. South a Treasure House. The National Conservation Exposi tion at Knoxville during September and October will be “different.” The displays in various lines will be the largest, the most diversified, the most interesting ever seen in any exposition | in the South; they will compare favor ably with any exposition ever held in the United States and they will all teach graphically, eloquently and point, edly the lesson of conservation, ad mittedly one of the greatest questions before the American people to-day. And about all the South —the great South, the South that is a treasure house of the nation, the South busy with the hum and the whirr of count less manufacturing industries —will be on display in Knoxville during the ex position. The South with its tremend ous resources and great industrial pro gress will be strikingly typified. There will be much for every citizen of the country to see in Knoxville dur ing the exposition months, there will be much for every one to learn. EXPOSITION TO BE READY. National Conservation Show To Make New Record in This Respect. The hundreds of thousands of visit ors from ail parts of the country, and particularly from the Southern States, to the National Conservation Exposi tion can be assured of one fact even at this early date: That no matter how early they make their visit to the ex position after the gates are formally thrown open they will see the displays complete. Work is so far advanced now that everything will be ready on the open ing day and the complete line of ex hibits in all of the many big, white buildings, and in all of the various de partments of these buildings, will like wise be ready. Too many times in the history cf ex positions in other parts cf the country it has happened that the first weeks saw only a portion of the exposition complete. This will not be the case at Knoxville. I * LOW RATES FOR EXPOSITION. Railroads Have Made Concessions For Big Knoxville Show. Exceptionally low rates —the lowest ever made for an exposition in the South —have been made by the rail roads for the National Conservation Exposition in Knoxville, Tenn., during the months of September and October. These reduced rates are in force ft cm start to finish of the exposition and will afford thousands of persons living within a radius of 300 miles oppor tunity to make the trip to Knoxville at comparatively little cost.